EspañolWhat do head and neck cancers have in common? Like the name suggests, it’s where they occur that groups them together. And the symptoms vary depending on the location of the cancer.“When doctors say ‘head and neck cancer,’ they’re usually talking about cancers that start in the mouth, throat, voice box, sinuses or salivary glands,” said Leila J. Mady, MD, a board-certified otolaryngologist (ENT) and head and neck surgeon at Johns Hopkins Medicine. “It doesn’t usually include brain, eye or thyroid cancer.”Head and neck cancers account for nearly 4% of all cancer cases in the United State...
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