Early-stage lesions may be amenable to surgical treatment. More advanced or unresectable cancers tend to be treated with radiotherapy (RT) alone or chemoradiotherapy (CRT), which hampered the comparison of the efficacy of RT alone with that of surgery combined with adjuvant RT. But some effort had been made to reflect the role of surgery in the management of salivary gland tumours. from a 37-year-old man named John Burley on 24 October 1785. The tumour weighed over 4 kilograms and took twenty-five minutes to remove. The specimen currently resides in the Hunterian Museum at the
Royal College of Surgeons of England. Treatment may include the following: •
Surgery: Complete surgical resection, with adequate free margins, is currently the mainstay treatment for salivary gland tumours. However, elective treatment of the N0 neck region remains a controversial topic. •
Radiotherapy: When a salivary gland tumour is cancerous, RT may be necessary. with evidence suggesting it is significantly more effective than photons in studies treating unresectable salivary gland tumours. •
Chemotherapy: Currently, little is known about the efficacy of chemotherapy in treating salivary gland tumours. Chemotherapy, which plays an important role in systemic therapy, is generally reserved for the palliative treatment of symptomatic locally recurrent and/or metastatic disease that is not amenable to further surgery or radiation. Conventional chemotherapy regimens, such as cisplatin and 5-FU or CAP (cisplatin, doxorubicin, and cyclophosphamide), are still utilized as first-line therapy for those with advanced lesions. •
Targeted therapy: Given the poor response to chemotherapy, it is urgent to explore novel therapeutic interventions for this disease. And great expectations have been put into individualized therapies: in particular, the EGF receptor family (EGFR and HER2), KIT, and androgen receptors are the most commonly investigated molecular targets in SGCs. Their expression seems not to be linked to its pathogenetic role in the development of SGCs, but more to the histogenetic origin of the tumour cells. Various targeted agents, such as imatinib, cetuximab, gefitinib, and trastuzumab, have been used to explore new treatments for salivary gland tumours, but because of their rare incidence, the number of cases available for targeted therapy analysis is relatively small. == Epidemiology ==