Evaluation of Incidence of Premalignant and Malignant Lesions by Mirror Image Biopsy in Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma
Oral cancer in early stages is oÃÆââ¬ËÃâââ¬âen ignored by society mainly due to its asymptomatic nature. Usually, such cancer gets discovered when it has metastasized to other locations, especially to the lymph nodes. ÃÆÃÂÃâÃÂe prevalence of above cancer is increasing worldwide and throughout the world, oral cancer ranks 6th among the malignant diseases. Oral cancer among of the head and neck malignancies constitutes 85% prevalence It is more prevalent in western countries and Southeast Asian countries. ÃÆÃÂÃâÃÂe 5-year survival rate of such disease is 75% if diagnosed early, but in cases where metastasis has already taken place it comes to 35%, with an average 5-year survival rate of 50%.. Alcohol, tobacco chewing, smoking, betel quid chewing, trauma and HPV viruses are implicated as the predisposing factors of OSCC. ÃÆÃÂÃâÃÂese agents on repeated infliction bring about DNA mutation promoting proto-oncogenes to oncogenes and interfere tumor suppressor genes which result in uncontrolled cell growth and proliferation signaling mechanisms.Even aÃÆââ¬ËÃâââ¬âer complete primary tumor excision up to histopathologically negative margins and subjecting to multimodality treatment therapy such as radiotherapy and chemotherapy, it may recur or manifest as second primary tumors within months to years. As Slaughter discovered satellites of epithelial dysplasia near the primary tumor, he proposed the concept of field cancerization. ÃÆÃÂÃâÃÂe hypothesis of metacentric neoplasia is explained by this concept.. Oral cavity including the upper aero digestive tract is described as the preferential site for occurrence of multiple primary tumors.. Second primary tumors are identified by Warren and gates criteria which describe them as an arising topographically separate lesion, must be malignant and of the same histopathological type as that of index tumor and probability of being a metastasis should be ruled out. ÃÆÃÂÃâÃÂe cancer field may not be progressing in a concentric fashion, but it can develop into one or more of the three processes; the sub mucosal spread of initially formed clone, implantation of the cancer cells via saliva and development of a new clone independently. ÃÆÃÂÃâÃÂe presence of second primary tumor lowers the survival rate of cancer patients, and loco regional management of primary also does not prevent the risk of appearance of second synchronous and metachronous tumors. ÃÆÃÂÃâÃÂe data was taken only from the patients who were later surgically treated in the department. AÃÆââ¬ËÃâââ¬âer the patients were anesthetized for the surgical procedure, an incisional biopsy was taken from two sites maintaining all aseptic precautions. ÃÆÃÂÃâÃÂe first site was from the primary tumor and second from the healthy appearing mirror image contralateral site, and both the biopsies harvested by the same operator. Biopsy samples were standardized in terms of size and orientation. ÃÆÃÂÃâÃÂe biopsy samples from the both sites were fixed in 10% bu ÃÆââ¢ÃâÃâ ÃÆââ¢Ãâô ered neutral formalin in separate hard glass test tubes, labeled and sent for histopathological evaluation to the department of pathology BSMMU. Findings from the primary lesion were tabulated as well di ÃÆââ¢ÃâÃâ ÃÆââ¢Ãâô erentiated, moderately di ÃÆââ¢ÃâÃâ ÃÆââ¢Ãâô erentiated, poorly di ÃÆââ¢ÃâÃâ ÃÆââ¢Ãâô erentiated and anaplastic. ÃÆÃÂÃâÃÂe findings from mirror image site were recorded for dysplasia, carcinoma in situ and frank malignancy. ÃÆÃÂÃâÃÂe morphological features like erythroplakia, leukoplakia were also recorded, however dysplasia, carcinoma in situ and frank malignancy were considered as primary study variables. Our study included 44 patients of ages from 28 to 76 years with single, unilateral, histopathologically confirmed oral squamous cell cancer. ÃÆÃÂÃâÃÂe mean age range of all patients was 55 ÃÆââ¬Å¡Ãâñ 10.71 years. Out of total patients, 20 (45.5%) were males and 24 (54.5%) were females; with the male female ratio of 0.8:1.28 (63.6%) of the total patients were older than 50 years whereas 16 (36.6%) were equal or below 50 years of
This work is partly presented at 6th International Conference on Cosmetology, Trichology & Aesthetic Practices, April 13-14, 2017 Dubai, UAE
Vol.4 No.1
Extended Abstract
Skin Diseases & Skin Care
2019
age. Our present study has quantified the incidence and the type of field change that occurred in the clinically normal-looking oral mucosa of patients presenting with single primary oral squamous cell carcinoma with the help of histological evaluation of ÃÆâÃâââ¬ÃâÃÅmirror imageÃÆâÃâââ¬Ãââ⢠biopsies taken from the contralateral anatomical site. Head and neck cancer is not the regional mucosal disease, can a ÃÆââ¢ÃâÃâ ÃÆââ¢Ãâô ect any part of aero digestive tract with di ÃÆââ¢ÃâÃâ ÃÆââ¢Ãâô erent predilection rates for di ÃÆââ¢ÃâÃâ ÃÆââ¢Ãâô erent sub sites and one site involvement rate independent of other. ÃÆÃÂÃâÃÂough the incidence of second field tumors is at the rate of 3.6% per year in aero digestive tract), neither precise nature of genetic alterations nor the structural changes leading to the development of carcinoma are until well established [1,8]. Our present study goes in favor with the study done by Tabor, et al. in 2001 who demonstrated loss of heterozygosis in non-contiguous mucosa biopsies by microsatellite markers on chromosomes 9p, 3p and 17p. ÃÆÃÂÃâÃÂe study group consisted of 44 unilateral, single, histologically confirmed primary oral squamous cell carcinoma patients, out of which 45.5% were males and 54.5% were females with the male to female ratio being 0.8:1. ÃÆÃÂÃâÃÂis M: F ratio is not consistent with the Rahman, et al. (2014) who demonstrated the ratio to be 1.5:1 in oral SCC patients attending a tertiary hospital in Bangladesh, and 3.4:1 by Maria, et al. in 2001 in oropharyngeal cancer in American population. Our finding that M:F ratio of 0.8:1 is unique because that study did not account for betel nut chewing habits of oral cancer patients
From our study, it can be concluded that clinically normal appeared mirror image oral mucosa in oral cancer patients may already have developed dysplasia which has the potential to turn to malignancy due course of time. Mirror image biopsy could be valuable and cost e ÃÆââ¢ÃâÃâ ÃÆââ¢Ãâô ective diagnostic tool to detect these changes at the earliest, which can be helpful for taking necessary measures to digress the malignant transformation. ÃÆÃÂÃâÃÂose patients were presented with dysplasia, recommended to avoid the predisposing factors and be remaining under regular follow up.
Author(s): Rahman QB, Bajgai DP
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