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PRODID:-//KESHO - ECPv6.16.3//NONSGML v1.0//EN
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X-WR-CALNAME:KESHO
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://kesho-kenya.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for KESHO
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TZID:Africa/Nairobi
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TZOFFSETFROM:+0300
TZOFFSETTO:+0300
TZNAME:EAT
DTSTART:20250101T000000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Africa/Nairobi:20260416T190000
DTEND;TZID=Africa/Nairobi:20260416T203000
DTSTAMP:20260606T152812
CREATED:20260526T192507Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260526T193940Z
UID:41705-1776366000-1776371400@kesho-kenya.org
SUMMARY:Bridging Surgery and Oncology in Head & Neck Cancer
DESCRIPTION:Moderator: Dr. Ahmed Komen\nSpeakers: Dr. Anthony Kenyanya\, Dr. Anthony Ndiritu\nDate: 16 April 2026\n\nThis session explored the management of head and neck cancer with particular attention to how surgical decisions and oncology pathways must align from the outset. Through oral cavity cancer as a key focus\, the session examined resectability\, margins\, nodal management\, reconstruction\, adjuvant therapy and functional outcomes. \nA central theme was that treatment planning must go beyond tumour removal. Dr. Anthony Kenyanya highlighted the importance of staging\, imaging\, pathology\, dental and nutritional assessment\, surgical access\, margin planning and neck node evaluation. In oral cavity cancers\, surgical success depends not only on clear oncologic resection\, but also on the ability to reconstruct defects and preserve speech\, swallowing\, appearance and quality of life. \nThe discussion also emphasised the challenge of late presentation and complex anatomy. Selective neck dissection\, sentinel node considerations\, access procedures such as mandibulotomy\, and the reconstructive ladder were framed as tools for balancing disease control with morbidity. The role of the pathologist and margin assessment was highlighted as central to determining risk and guiding further treatment. \nDr. Anthony Ndiritu built on this by outlining how radiotherapy and chemoradiation fit into early\, locally advanced\, post-operative\, recurrent and metastatic diseases. Early-stage disease may often be treated with a single modality\, while locally advanced disease requires careful integration of surgery\, radiotherapy and chemotherapy. \nPositive margins and extranodal extension were discussed as major indications for post-operative chemoradiation\, with timely initiation of treatment after surgery being important. The session also addressed treatment technique\, patient fitness\, nutrition\, supportive care and the need to tailor recommendations to the services and expertise available. \nAcross the session\, a consistent message emerged: head and neck cancer care is as much about function\, coordination and follow-through as it is about disease control. \nKey Takeaways\n\nHead and neck cancer decisions must integrate tumour stage\, resectability\, patient fitness and functional outcomes.\nMargin planning\, pathology reporting and neck node assessment directly shape adjuvant treatment decisions.\nSurgery requires strong reconstruction and rehabilitation planning to preserve speech\, swallowing and appearance.\nLocally advanced disease often needs combined-modality treatment through an MDT approach.\nPositive margins and extranodal extension are key triggers for post-operative chemoradiation.\nSupportive care\, nutrition and patient navigation are essential to treatment completion.
URL:https://kesho-kenya.org/event/bridging-surgery-and-oncology-in-head-neck-cancer/
CATEGORIES:CME 2026,Continuing Medical Education (CME)
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://kesho-kenya.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Bridging-Surgery-and-Oncology-in-Head-Neck-Cancer-e1779824360609.png
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