Erschienen in:
20.04.2016 | Head and Neck
Squamous cell carcinoma of tongue and buccal mucosa: clinico-pathologically different entities
verfasst von:
Sudhir Nair, Bikramjit Singh, Prashant V. Pawar, Sourav Datta, Deepa Nair, Shubhada Kane, Pankaj Chaturvedi
Erschienen in:
European Archives of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology
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Ausgabe 11/2016
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Abstract
The objective of this study was to examine the clinical and pathological features of squamous cell carcinoma of the Tongue and Buccal Mucosa and understand their differences. This is a retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data of 735 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the tongue and 665 cases of carcinoma of the buccal mucosa treated by surgery at our hospital. Statistical analysis was done to examine clinical and pathological differences between carcinoma of the tongue and the buccal mucosa with regards to age, gender, clinical T stage/N stage, pathological T stage/N stage, overall stage, grade, thickness, perinodal extension (PNE), lymphovascular emboli (LVE) and perineural invasion (PNI). Statistically significant differences were found for factors like age (p < 0.001), gender (p < 0.001), clinical T staging (p < 0.001) and pathological stage (p < 0.001), grade of tumor (p < 0.001) and perineural invasion (p < 0.001) between carcinoma of the tongue and the buccal mucosa. Forty-eight percent patients in either subsite had pathologically proven node negative necks (pN0, p = 0.88). Multivariate analysis for occult nodal metastases revealed that predictive factors were different for the two subsites. There are significant differences between cancers of the tongue and buccal mucosa for various clinical and pathological factors. This may be a reflection of the underlying differences in their causation and pathophysiology. Squamous cell carcinoma in these two subsites should therefore be regarded as clinico-pathologically distinct entities.