There are five main treatment methods for laryngeal cancer. Each has a different purpose:
Surgery
The goal of surgery is to remove the tumor from the larynx while leaving as much of the larynx intact as possible. People who have any part of the larynx removed will have voice changes after surgery. Depending on the extent of the surgery, some people may no longer be able to speak or breathe normally. Lymph nodes that contain cancer may also need to be removed.
Surgery may also be used to put in ports for chemotherapy or create a tracheostomy. A tracheostomy is a hole through the front of the neck into the windpipe (trachea). A tube is put into this hole to allow you to breathe through it instead of your mouth or nose. A tracheostomy may be needed only during treatment. Then plastic or reconstructive surgery may be needed to help restore the way you look and breathe. If all the larynx is removed, you'll have a tracheostomy the rest of your life.
Radiation therapy
The goal of radiation is to kill cancer cells using powerful beams of energy. This treatment can be used to shrink a tumor before surgery. Or it can be used after surgery to kill any remaining cancer cells. Sometimes it's used as the main treatment instead of surgery. Radiation may also be used if the cancer comes back after treatment. Radiation only treats cancer cells in the area that's radiated.
Chemotherapy
This treatment uses strong medicines to treat cancer. For laryngeal cancer, the goal of chemotherapy (chemo) is to reduce the chance that the cancer will spread to other parts of the body. Or if the cancer has already spread, chemo can treat the spread.
Your doctor may prescribe chemotherapy before or after surgery. In some cases, chemo and radiation therapy are used together to kill all cancer cells. This is called radiosensitizing treatment or chemoradiation.
Targeted therapy
Targeted therapy uses medicines that attack specific parts of cancer cells. Some laryngeal cancer cells are controlled by a protein called epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), which helps them grow. The most commonly used medicine that targets these cells is called cetuximab. It blocks EGFR so the cancer cell growth slows or stops.
Targeted therapy might be used along with radiation therapy to help treat early-stage laryngeal cancer. Or it might be used along with or after chemo for cancers that have come back or spread to other parts of the body.
Immunotherapy
This treatment uses medicines that boost your immune system to better fight cancer. It may be used if laryngeal cancer comes back or spreads after getting chemo. Immunotherapy may also be used if chemo isn't working.