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Comprehensive review of
malignancies of Lips and Oral
           Cavity




            DR Kamlesh K. Dubey
         Deptt. Of Otorhinolaryngology
               AIIMS, New Delhi
Cellular system of Oral Cavity

Human squamous cell epithelium: important
role as barrier against- mechanical,
physical, pathological injury.
Limited availability of well defined culture
system for studying oral epithelial cell
biology.
Various molecular markers: for early
diagnosis
EPIDEMIOLOGY
   Oral cavity: extends from vermillion border
    of lips to plane between junction of hard
    palate and soft palate.
   Include : oral cavity- buccal mucosa,
    tongue, gingiva, retromolar trigon, floor of
    mouth, hard palate
   High incidence in India, France, SE asia.
   40% of HN cancer
   Age of onset 6-7th decade, sex ratio 3:1
Pre-Malignant Lesions
   Leukoplakia - chronic, white, verrucous plaque with
    histologic atypia
       Severity linked to the duration and quantity of tobacco and
        alcohol use
       Occur anywhere in the oral cavity
       Lip, tongue, or floor of the mouth lesions are prone for
        progression to SCC
   Erythroplakia - non-inflammatory erythematous plaque
       Analagous to intra-oral erythroplasia of Queyrat or SCC in situ
       Biopsies - severe dysplasia and areas of frank invasion
Leukoplakia
Erythroplakia
Pre-Malignant Lesions…
   Submucous fibrosis
       generalized white discoloration of oral mucosa with
        progressive fibrosis, painful mucosal atrophy and
        restrictive fibrotic bands
       individuals who chew betel quid, a concoction of
        tobacco, lime, areca nut and betel leaves
       Ultimately leads to trismus, dysphagia and severe
        xerostomia
       5 - 10 % progress to SCC
Cancerous lesion of Lips& Oral
            cavity
   Lips –SCC, Melanoma, BCC(rare)
   Oral cavity:
         -- scc: 9/10 incidence
         --verrucous ca: <5% low grade, slow
    growing rarely metastasizes with tendency
    to invade deep tissue.
Cancerous lesion of Lips& Oral
            cavity
  Minor salivary gland tumor:
 -in the glands lining the oral cavity
 -adenoidcystic ca, mucoepidermoid ca,
  adenocarcinoma.
-Sarcoma
Incidence
   Globally >300,000 people diagnosed/year
   Eighth most common malignancy
   India –upto 40% of all malignancies
   M>F
   Raising trend
   6-7th decade
   Most of the people are dying because of
    ignorance
INCIDENCE
Demographic and clinical profile of oral
 squamous cell carcinoma patients: a
 retrospective study ( Shenoi R, Sharma
 BK, et.al, Indian J Cancer. 2012
 Jan;49(1):21-6:
Most common site: mandibular alveolus
Major cause: tobacco chewing
Majority of patients presented in stage III
Majority presented within 6 months of onset
Risk Factors
   Tobacco: About 90% of people with oral cavity
    and oropharyngeal cancer use tobacco
   Alcohol: Drinking alcohol strongly increases a
    smoker's risk of developing oral cavity and
    oropharyngeal cancer.
   Ultraviolet light: More than 30% of patients
    with cancers of the lip have outdoor occupations
    associated with prolonged exposure to sunlight.
   Irritation: Long-term irritation to the lining of
    the mouth caused by poorly fitting dentures
Risk Factors Cont…
   Poor nutrition: A diet low in fruits and vegetables is
    associated with an increased risk
   Mouthwash: Some studies have suggested that
    mouthwash with a high alcohol content
   Human papillomavirus (HPV) infection:
   Immune system suppression :
   Age: The likelihood of developing oral and
    oropharyngeal cancer increases with age, especially
    after age 35.
   Gender: Oral and oropharyngeal cancer is twice as
    common in men as in women
How tobacco affects
   Tobacco smoke contains >4000
    chemicals, at least 60 shown to be
    carcinogens.
   Smoke less tobacco:
    main form: chewing, snuff
    at least 28 carcinogens found in smokeless form
Relative Risk factors for Oral
              Cancers
Habit                         Relative Risk %
   None                         1%
   Betel nut Chewing            4%
   Smoking only                 3-6%
   Betel chewing + Tobacco      8-15%
    chewing
   Betel chewing + Smoking      4-25%
   Betel+Tobacco+smoking        20%
How Alcohol affects
   Chronic alcohol exposure results in increased
    cancer incidence in animal model.
   Acetaldehyde , reactive oxygen species- main
    mutagen
   Acetaldehyde: directly binds to DNA, alters
    methyl transfer leading to hypomethylation
    leading to alerted gene products
   Alcohol promotes cytochrome P450- which
    increases activation of procarcinogens( tobacco,
    alcohol).
   Alcohol can act as solvent facilitating entry of
    carcinogens into cells
Recent study on role of alcohol
   Joint effects of alcohol consumption and polymorphisms
    in alcohol and oxidative stress metabolism genes on risk
    of head and neck cancer (Hakenwerth AM, et.al. cancer
    epidemiology biomarkers prev 2011 Nov;20(11):2438-49.
    Epub 2011 Sep 22)
   Concluded that alterations in alcohol and oxidative stress
    pathways influence SCCHN carcinogenesis and warrant
    further investtigation
Role of HPV in Oral SCC
   Role of human papilloma virus in the oral carcinogenesis:
    an Indian perspective (Chocolatewala NM, et.al. J Cancer R
    Ther. 2009 Apr-Jun;5(2):7-17).
   Association strongest for Oropharynx, specially cancer of
    tonsils followed by base of tongue.
   High risk HPV-16 predominate type.
   Commonly affects younger age groups , male, non
    smokers.
   Better outcomes, more responsive to RT, higher survival
    rate.
INHERITED RISK FACTORS

A review of inherited cancer syndromes and
their relevance to oral squamous cell
carcinoma (Prime SS, Thakker NS, et.al.
Oral oncology 2001 Jan;37(1):1-16:
examined genetic defects associated with
inherited cancer syndromes and their
relevance to oral cancer.
Defective DNA repair mechanism:
xeroderma pigmentosa, ataxia
INHERITED RISK FACTORS
   Defective DNA repair mechanism:
    xeroderma pigmentosa, ataxia
    telangiectasia, bloom syndrome, fanconi
    syndrome
   Tumor suppressor gene(p53) defect: Li
    Fraumeni syndrome.
INHERITED RISK FACTORS
   Relationship between ABO blood groups
    and oral cancer (Jaleel BF, et. al. Indian J
    Dental Research 2012 Jan;23(1):7-10:
    found that people with blood group A had
    1.46 times higher risk of developing oral
    cancer as compared with other blood
    group.
INHERITED RISK FACTORS
   Allergies and risk of head and neck
    cancer (Michaud DS, et.al. Cancer Causes
    Control. 2012 Aug;23(8):1317-22. Epub 2012
    Jun 19).
   Case control study
   Allergies have heightened Th2 immunity
   Had a 19% lower risk of HNSCC.
   Statistically significant for oropharyngeal cancer.
   HPV status does not confound or modify
    associations with allergies.
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
   Cytogenetic : chromosomes
    3,5,8,11,17,18.
   Tumor suppressor genes inactivation:
    p16,p21,p53,RB gene.
   Proto-oncogene activation:
    cyclinD1/PRADD1.
   Growth factors /receptors overexpression:
    EGF,EGF-R,TGF-ɑ,HER-2/neu,FGF,FGF-
    R,PDGF).
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
   RAS family oncogene.
   Telomeres, telomerase, cell senescence
   Tumor immunology(role of TIL, CTL, IL-
    2/4/6)
   Tumor invasion and metastasis:
    (endothelial
    proliferation:PGE2,TGFβ,FGF,VEGF),MM
    P
MOLECULAR PROGRESSION MODEL OF HNSCC
                CARCINOGENESIS

                           Normal squamous mucosa
EGF, EGFR
Overexpression
                            Squamous hyperplasia
Telomerase activation                               p16 inactivation

                                Dysplasia
PRAD-1 amplification                                3p deletion
                                                    p53 inactivation
                              Carcinoma in-situ
                                                    4q, 5q, 8p, 13q
                                                    deletion
                             Invasive carcinoma
Matrix metalloproteinase
Over-expression
                                Metastasis
DNA changes
 P53, p16, Ki67 immunoexpression in oral
  scc ( Dragomir LP, et.al, Rom jo morph
  embry 2012; 53(1)89-93:
positivity index- increased for p16
tumor invasion- identified with p53, Ki67.
Study highlights value of immunostain for
  p16 in identifying dysplastic lesion
Predictive importance of p53, Ki16 markers
  in identifying aggressive form of tumour.
DNA CHANGES
    Immunohistochemical p53, Ki16, hTERT
     in oral scc( Abraho AC et.al.Brazil oral
     research 2011 Jan-Feb;25(1):34-41:
    p53 positivity in 93.3% of PMD, 43.3% of
     OSCC, 80% OEH.
Site of oral cavity
   Tongue : 35%
   Floor of mouth: 30%
   Lower alveolus: 15%
   Buccal mucosa: 10%
   Upper alveolus/hard palate: 8%
   RMT: 2%
   Lips: lower-93%, upper-5%, commissure-
    2%
Symptoms
   a sore in the mouth that does not heal (most
    common symptom)
   pain in the mouth that doesn't go away (also
    very common)
   a persistent lump or thickening in the cheek
   a persistent white or red patch on the gums,
    tongue, tonsil, or lining of the mouth
   a sore throat or a feeling that something is
    caught in the throat that doesn't go away
   Increased salivation
More Symptoms
   difficulty chewing or swallowing
   difficulty moving the jaw or tongue
   swelling of the jaw that causes dentures to fit
    poorly or become uncomfortable
   loosening of the teeth or pain around the teeth
    or jaw
   voice changes
   a lump or mass in the neck
   weight loss
   persistent bad breath
Patient Workup
   History
   Clinical examination
   Investigations
Patient Workup
   Investigations :
     Primary: photographs
              incisional biopsy
              FNAC
              Orthopantogram
              CXR
              ECG
              Routin blood investigations
Patient Workup

 Investigations: for staging
- CT face + neck ± CT chest
- MRI
- USG of neck or primary ± USG guided
  FNAC of suspicious lymphadenopathy
- PET
INVESTIGATIONS FOR
                 RECONSTRUCTION
   Allen’s test of vascular supply to hand if a radial forearm
    flap anticipated.
   MRA of leg vessels if composite fibula reconstruction
    anticipated.
   Colour Doppler of chest , abdomen if DCIA(deep
    circumflex iliac artery) free flap anticipated
   CAD/CAM models if complex composite reconstruction
   Dental impression for all maxillary tumours
STAGING OF THE DISEASE

American joint committee on cancer:
T , N ,M
Tx- primary tumour cannot be assessed
T0- No evidence of primary tumour
T1- ≤ 2cm in greatest dimension
T2- 4cm < 2cm> in greatest dimension
T3- > 4cm in greatest dimension
STAGING OF THE DISEASE

 T4a- Oral cavity: tumour invades through
cortical bone, into deep(extrinsic) muscle of
tongue, maxillary sinus or skin.
      Lips: cortical bone, inferior alveolar
nerve, floor of mouth, skin i.e. chin or nose.

 T4b- involves masticator space, pterygoid
plates, skull base and/or encases internal
carotid artery
STAGING OF THE DISEASE

N stage:
  Nx- regional lymph nodes can not be
assessed.
  N0- no regional lymph node metastasis.
  N1- metastasis in a single ipsilateral
lymph node ≤ 3cm in greatest dimension.
  N2a- metastasis in a single ipsilateral LN
> 3cm but < 6cm in greatest dimension.
STAGING OF THE DISEASE

 N2b- metastasis in multiple ipsilateral LNs,
none > 6cm in greatest dimension.
 N2c- metastasis in B/L or C/L LNs, none >
6 cm.
 N3- metastasis in a LN > 6 cm in greatest
dimension

M stage: Mx- cannot be assessed, M0- no
distant metastasis, M1- distant metastasisi.
Stage Grouping

Stage 0      Tis          N0           M0
Stage I      T1           N0           M0
Stage II     T2           N0           M0
Stage III    T1, T2       N1           M0
             T3           N0, N1       M0
Stage IV A   T1, T2, T3   N2           M0
             T4a          N0, N1, N2   M0
Stage IV B   Any T        N3           M0
             T4b          Any N        M0
Stage IV C   Any T        Any N        M1
TREATMENT
   Treatment goals: to eradicate primary
    tumor and LN metastasis, to maintain
    function, cosmetic reconstruction
   Factors affecting choice of treatment:
    tumor factor
    patient factor
    resource factor
Treatment Goals for
    Cancer of the Oral Cavity
   • Cure of cancer
   • Preservation or restoration of form
    and function
   • Avoid or minimize sequelae of
    treatment
   • Prevent second primary cancers
TUMOR FACTORS AFFECTING
               TREATMENT
   • Site
   • Size (T stage)
   • Location
   • Multiplicity
   • Proximity to bone
   • Pathological features
   • Histology, grade, depth of invasion, tumor
   type
   • Status of cervical lymph nodes
   • Previous treatment
TREATMENT
   Patient factors:
    age, general medical condition,
    performance status, occupation,
    lifestyle(smoking/drinking)
    socioeconomic considerations
    previous treatment
TREATMENT
   Physician factors:
    surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy
    nursing & rehabilitation services,
    dental, prosthetics, support services
Treatment
   Surgery
   Radiotherapy
   Chemotherapy
   Immunotherapy
   Targeted therapy
   Gene therapy
Treatment of Choice
   Stage I , II: single modality treatment is
    effective and preferable.
   Stage III , IV: multimodal therapy is
    essential
TREATMENT
   SURGERY:
       Early stage T1/2No tumor: Wide excision +/ - ND
       High risk of locoregional recurrent (40%)
   Management of No Neck :
       High incidence of occult metastasis in the clinically
       No     Neck (15-43%)
       Controversy : Observation or Surgery/Radiation
       Depend on primary site.
       Should be have minimal morbidity
       ELND if risk of occult meta >20%. (SND/SOHND).

   Locally advanced tumor: Combined modality treatment
Classification of ND

1991 Classification:               2001 Classification:
 RND                               RND

 Modified RND                      Modified RND

 Selective ND:                     Selective ND (SND):
  Supraomohyoid                      SND (L.I-III/IV)
  Lateral                            SND (L.II-IV)
  Posterolateral                     SND (L.II-V)
  Anterior                           SND (L.VI)
 Extended ND                       Extended ND

Proposed by American HN Society and AAOHNS
Selective neck dissection   Modified RND type 1,2,3.
Standard treatment options for
management of lymph node:
Radiation therapy alone or neck dissection:
     N1 (0–2 cm).
     N2b or N3; all nodes smaller than 2
     cm. (A combined surgical and
     radiation therapy approach should also
     be considered.)
Radiation therapy and neck dissection:
     N1 (2–3 cm), N2a, N3.
Surgery followed by radiation therapy,
indications for which are as follows:
     Multiple positive nodes.
     Contralateral subclinical metastases.
     Invasion of tumor through the capsule
     of the lymph node.
     N2b or N3 (one or more nodes in each
     side of the neck, as appropriate, >2
     cm).
Radiation therapy prior to surgery:
     Large fixed nodes.
SURGICAL APPROACHES
     Trans-oral approach
     Lower cheek approach
     Upper cheek approach
     mandibulotomy
     Visor flap
Surgical approach depends
                on
   • Tumor size
   • Tumor site
   • Tumor location
   • Proximity to mandible or maxilla
   • Need for neck dissection
   • Need for reconstructive surgery
SURGICAL MARGINS
   UK Royal college of pathologist
    guidelines:
   Clear margin: histological clearance
    >5mm
   Close margins: 1-5mm
   Positive margin: <1mm
   Incidence higher in oral cavity cancer than
    other HN sites.
   Potentially due to complex anatomy and 3D
Factors predicting positive margin

   Large tumour.
   Perineural spread.
   Vascular permeation.
   Noncohesive invasive front
   Cervical metastasis
RADIOTHERAPY
   Applications:
    - Radical : early tongue, fom cancer
    - palliative : advanced total control not
    possible: 20Gy x5 daily fractions x 1 week.
    -combined therapy.
    -preoperative.
    -postoperative.
RADIOTHERAPY
   Small (T1/T2), superficial (<5mm
    thickness) lesions of tongue & FOM:
    interstitial brachytherapy.
   Dose: 60 Gy/6days with iridium-192
POST-OP RT
Indications:
-presence of nodal disease with exptracapsular spread.
-presence of involved surgical margin
-excision margin less than 5mm.
-stage III/IV.
-perineural or vascular invasion.
-poor differentiation.
-oral cavity primary.
-multicentric primary.
->4 nodes positive.
-soft tissue invasion.
-dysplasia or carcinoma insitu at resection margin.
IMMUNOTHERAPY
   Based on two principles:

    -immune system should recognise and destroy abnormal
     cells.
    - tumor cells are poorly immunogenic and strongly
      immunosuppressive.
     . Tumors downregulate antigen presenting molecule
     . PGE2 produced by tumors inhibit lymphocyte
       proliferation.
      . Cytokines produced by tumors inhibit lymphocytes
        function.
IMMUNOTHERAPY
   IL-2 : stimulate growth, diffrentiation and survival
    of cytotoxic T cells.
     -systemic injection associated with sever
     reaction.
    - Local injection in tumour: short half life
    requiring frequent injections.
     -IRX2 human cytokine mixture injected
    perilymphatically near tumour: in clinical trial
IMMUNOTHERAPY
 A trial of IRX-2 in patients with squamous cell
  carcinomas of the head and neck(Hadden J, et.
  al. Int Immunopharmacology. 2003
  Aug;3(8):1073-81:
using immunotherapy with 10-20 days of
  perilymphatic injections of a natural cytokines
  mixture (NCM:IRX2;200 units IL2 equivalence)
Found - significant reduction in tumour mass.
       -increased area of leukocyte infiltration
IMMUNOTHERAPY
   Non-Specific Active Immunomodulation
       BCG vaccine
         Used to induce active, non specific stimulation of
          the immune system
         Reports of increased tumor free survival which

          could not be substantiated
         Trials with other vaccines (strep pyogenes,

          trypanosoma cruzi, levamisole) show no benefits in
          long term survival
IMMUNOTHERAPY
   HPV Vaccines
       Estimated that 25% of HNSCC are HPV associated
            Tend to arise in younger patients
            Lingual and palatine tonsils
            Occur predominantly in non smoker/drinker
            Associated with a more favorable prognosis
       HPV viral oncogenes E6 and E7 are consistently expressed in
        HPV associated cancers
            Thought to integrate into the host DNA, and when expressed,
             bypass the regulation of cell proliferation
       Both protein and DNA vaccines targeting HPV DNA are currently
        in phase I and phase II trials
TARGETED THERAPY
   Targeted therapy in head and neck cancer: state
    of the art 2007 and review of clinical
    applications( Langer CJ. Cancer 2008 Jun
    15;112(12):2635-45:
    -anti-EGFR monoclonal antibody(MoAb)
    cetuximab first targeted therapy to be developed
    -single agent cetuximab confer clinical benefits in
    patient with cisplatin refractory metastatic
    disease.
TARGETED THERAPY
   Molecular targeted therapies in head and neck cancer -
    An update of recent developments(Martin Goerner, et.al,
    Head & Neck Oncology 2010, 2:8):
     -anti-EGFR MoAbs :cetuximab , pantimumab,
     zalutumumab
     -EGFR targeted tyrosine kinase inhibitors: gefitinib,
      erlotinib
     - EGFR & HER-2 combined tyrosine kinase inhibitors:
       lapatinib, BIBW-2992.
     - VEGFR inhibitor: bevacicumab, sorafenib, sunitinib.
TARGETED THERAPY
    Biologic Therapy in Head and Neck Cancer: A
     Road with Hurdles(Specenier P, et.al. ISRN
     Onco. 2012;2012:163752. Epub 2012 Jun 13):
    - Yet to meet their primary endpoint.
    - result with EGFR directed tyrosine kinase
     inhibitor disappointing.
     -other potential target include: insulin-like growth factor1
     receptor(IGF-1R), insulin receptor(IR), histone
     deacetylases(HDAC), mammalian target of rapamycin(mTOR) ,
     platelet derived growth factor receptor(PDGFR), heat shock
     protein90(HSP90), nuclear factor kappa-B(NF-kB), aurora A or B,
     and phosphatidylinositol3-kinase(PIK3CA).
Positive correlations of Oct-4 and Nanog
 in oral cancer stem like cells and high
 grade oral squamous cell
 carcinoma( Chiou SH, et.al, clinical cancer
 research. 2008 Jul 1;14(13):4085-95:
Enriched OC-SLC highly expressed
 stem/progenitor cell markers and
 transporter (Oct-4, Nanog, CD117, Nestin,
 CD113, ABCG2)
GENE THERAPY
   Gene therapy for oral squamous cell carcinoma:
    An overview( TR Saraswathi, et.al, Indian J Dent
    Res. 2007 Jul-Sep;18(3):120-3)
   STRATEGIES:
    -gene addition therapy: reconstitution of wild type p-53
    function with p-53 expressing adenovirus-> led to
    inhibition of SCC cell lines.
     - antisense RNA therapy: introducing a remedial gene
    that prevents expression of a specific defective gene:
    potential target E6 & E7 genes of HPV.
      - suicide gene therapy: introduction of a gene into a cell
Recurrent lips & oral cavity cancer

   Surgery is preferred, if radiation was used
    initially.
   Surgery, radiation or combination if
    surgery used initially.
   Chemotherapy , but no increase in
    survival demonstrated.
   Other novel therapy method
PROGNOSIS
   Location/thickness/depth of primary tumor
   Staging
   Type of histology
   Grading
   Presence of perineural spread
   Mandibular invasion
   Ln extension (Level, size, exptracapsular)
   Molecular markers (?)
What happens after Treatment?
   Speech and Swallowing Therapy
   Follow-up tests
   Chemoprevention
   Watch for new symptoms
   General health considerations
Summary
   The main problem of oral cancer is early
    detection
   Surgery is still the most important modality in
    management of oral cancer.
   Better understanding of molecular biology of
    HNSCC.
   Bio-molecular markers can be used in the
    management of SCC oral cancer.
   High risk of second primary cancer,
    Chemoprevention?

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Oral cancer pwr.pnt.

  • 1. Comprehensive review of malignancies of Lips and Oral Cavity DR Kamlesh K. Dubey Deptt. Of Otorhinolaryngology AIIMS, New Delhi
  • 2. Cellular system of Oral Cavity Human squamous cell epithelium: important role as barrier against- mechanical, physical, pathological injury. Limited availability of well defined culture system for studying oral epithelial cell biology. Various molecular markers: for early diagnosis
  • 3. EPIDEMIOLOGY  Oral cavity: extends from vermillion border of lips to plane between junction of hard palate and soft palate.  Include : oral cavity- buccal mucosa, tongue, gingiva, retromolar trigon, floor of mouth, hard palate  High incidence in India, France, SE asia.  40% of HN cancer  Age of onset 6-7th decade, sex ratio 3:1
  • 4.
  • 5. Pre-Malignant Lesions  Leukoplakia - chronic, white, verrucous plaque with histologic atypia  Severity linked to the duration and quantity of tobacco and alcohol use  Occur anywhere in the oral cavity  Lip, tongue, or floor of the mouth lesions are prone for progression to SCC  Erythroplakia - non-inflammatory erythematous plaque  Analagous to intra-oral erythroplasia of Queyrat or SCC in situ  Biopsies - severe dysplasia and areas of frank invasion
  • 8. Pre-Malignant Lesions…  Submucous fibrosis  generalized white discoloration of oral mucosa with progressive fibrosis, painful mucosal atrophy and restrictive fibrotic bands  individuals who chew betel quid, a concoction of tobacco, lime, areca nut and betel leaves  Ultimately leads to trismus, dysphagia and severe xerostomia  5 - 10 % progress to SCC
  • 9.
  • 10.
  • 11. Cancerous lesion of Lips& Oral cavity  Lips –SCC, Melanoma, BCC(rare)  Oral cavity: -- scc: 9/10 incidence --verrucous ca: <5% low grade, slow growing rarely metastasizes with tendency to invade deep tissue.
  • 12. Cancerous lesion of Lips& Oral cavity  Minor salivary gland tumor: -in the glands lining the oral cavity -adenoidcystic ca, mucoepidermoid ca, adenocarcinoma. -Sarcoma
  • 13.
  • 14. Incidence  Globally >300,000 people diagnosed/year  Eighth most common malignancy  India –upto 40% of all malignancies  M>F  Raising trend  6-7th decade  Most of the people are dying because of ignorance
  • 15. INCIDENCE Demographic and clinical profile of oral squamous cell carcinoma patients: a retrospective study ( Shenoi R, Sharma BK, et.al, Indian J Cancer. 2012 Jan;49(1):21-6: Most common site: mandibular alveolus Major cause: tobacco chewing Majority of patients presented in stage III Majority presented within 6 months of onset
  • 16. Risk Factors  Tobacco: About 90% of people with oral cavity and oropharyngeal cancer use tobacco  Alcohol: Drinking alcohol strongly increases a smoker's risk of developing oral cavity and oropharyngeal cancer.  Ultraviolet light: More than 30% of patients with cancers of the lip have outdoor occupations associated with prolonged exposure to sunlight.  Irritation: Long-term irritation to the lining of the mouth caused by poorly fitting dentures
  • 17. Risk Factors Cont…  Poor nutrition: A diet low in fruits and vegetables is associated with an increased risk  Mouthwash: Some studies have suggested that mouthwash with a high alcohol content  Human papillomavirus (HPV) infection:  Immune system suppression :  Age: The likelihood of developing oral and oropharyngeal cancer increases with age, especially after age 35.  Gender: Oral and oropharyngeal cancer is twice as common in men as in women
  • 18. How tobacco affects  Tobacco smoke contains >4000 chemicals, at least 60 shown to be carcinogens.  Smoke less tobacco: main form: chewing, snuff at least 28 carcinogens found in smokeless form
  • 19. Relative Risk factors for Oral Cancers Habit Relative Risk %  None  1%  Betel nut Chewing  4%  Smoking only  3-6%  Betel chewing + Tobacco  8-15% chewing  Betel chewing + Smoking  4-25%  Betel+Tobacco+smoking  20%
  • 20. How Alcohol affects  Chronic alcohol exposure results in increased cancer incidence in animal model.  Acetaldehyde , reactive oxygen species- main mutagen  Acetaldehyde: directly binds to DNA, alters methyl transfer leading to hypomethylation leading to alerted gene products  Alcohol promotes cytochrome P450- which increases activation of procarcinogens( tobacco, alcohol).  Alcohol can act as solvent facilitating entry of carcinogens into cells
  • 21. Recent study on role of alcohol  Joint effects of alcohol consumption and polymorphisms in alcohol and oxidative stress metabolism genes on risk of head and neck cancer (Hakenwerth AM, et.al. cancer epidemiology biomarkers prev 2011 Nov;20(11):2438-49. Epub 2011 Sep 22)  Concluded that alterations in alcohol and oxidative stress pathways influence SCCHN carcinogenesis and warrant further investtigation
  • 22. Role of HPV in Oral SCC  Role of human papilloma virus in the oral carcinogenesis: an Indian perspective (Chocolatewala NM, et.al. J Cancer R Ther. 2009 Apr-Jun;5(2):7-17).  Association strongest for Oropharynx, specially cancer of tonsils followed by base of tongue.  High risk HPV-16 predominate type.  Commonly affects younger age groups , male, non smokers.  Better outcomes, more responsive to RT, higher survival rate.
  • 23. INHERITED RISK FACTORS A review of inherited cancer syndromes and their relevance to oral squamous cell carcinoma (Prime SS, Thakker NS, et.al. Oral oncology 2001 Jan;37(1):1-16: examined genetic defects associated with inherited cancer syndromes and their relevance to oral cancer. Defective DNA repair mechanism: xeroderma pigmentosa, ataxia
  • 24. INHERITED RISK FACTORS  Defective DNA repair mechanism: xeroderma pigmentosa, ataxia telangiectasia, bloom syndrome, fanconi syndrome  Tumor suppressor gene(p53) defect: Li Fraumeni syndrome.
  • 25. INHERITED RISK FACTORS  Relationship between ABO blood groups and oral cancer (Jaleel BF, et. al. Indian J Dental Research 2012 Jan;23(1):7-10: found that people with blood group A had 1.46 times higher risk of developing oral cancer as compared with other blood group.
  • 26. INHERITED RISK FACTORS  Allergies and risk of head and neck cancer (Michaud DS, et.al. Cancer Causes Control. 2012 Aug;23(8):1317-22. Epub 2012 Jun 19).  Case control study  Allergies have heightened Th2 immunity  Had a 19% lower risk of HNSCC.  Statistically significant for oropharyngeal cancer.  HPV status does not confound or modify associations with allergies.
  • 27. MOLECULAR BIOLOGY  Cytogenetic : chromosomes 3,5,8,11,17,18.  Tumor suppressor genes inactivation: p16,p21,p53,RB gene.  Proto-oncogene activation: cyclinD1/PRADD1.  Growth factors /receptors overexpression: EGF,EGF-R,TGF-ɑ,HER-2/neu,FGF,FGF- R,PDGF).
  • 28. MOLECULAR BIOLOGY  RAS family oncogene.  Telomeres, telomerase, cell senescence  Tumor immunology(role of TIL, CTL, IL- 2/4/6)  Tumor invasion and metastasis: (endothelial proliferation:PGE2,TGFβ,FGF,VEGF),MM P
  • 29. MOLECULAR PROGRESSION MODEL OF HNSCC CARCINOGENESIS Normal squamous mucosa EGF, EGFR Overexpression Squamous hyperplasia Telomerase activation p16 inactivation Dysplasia PRAD-1 amplification 3p deletion p53 inactivation Carcinoma in-situ 4q, 5q, 8p, 13q deletion Invasive carcinoma Matrix metalloproteinase Over-expression Metastasis
  • 30. DNA changes  P53, p16, Ki67 immunoexpression in oral scc ( Dragomir LP, et.al, Rom jo morph embry 2012; 53(1)89-93: positivity index- increased for p16 tumor invasion- identified with p53, Ki67. Study highlights value of immunostain for p16 in identifying dysplastic lesion Predictive importance of p53, Ki16 markers in identifying aggressive form of tumour.
  • 31. DNA CHANGES  Immunohistochemical p53, Ki16, hTERT in oral scc( Abraho AC et.al.Brazil oral research 2011 Jan-Feb;25(1):34-41: p53 positivity in 93.3% of PMD, 43.3% of OSCC, 80% OEH.
  • 32. Site of oral cavity  Tongue : 35%  Floor of mouth: 30%  Lower alveolus: 15%  Buccal mucosa: 10%  Upper alveolus/hard palate: 8%  RMT: 2%  Lips: lower-93%, upper-5%, commissure- 2%
  • 33. Symptoms  a sore in the mouth that does not heal (most common symptom)  pain in the mouth that doesn't go away (also very common)  a persistent lump or thickening in the cheek  a persistent white or red patch on the gums, tongue, tonsil, or lining of the mouth  a sore throat or a feeling that something is caught in the throat that doesn't go away  Increased salivation
  • 34. More Symptoms  difficulty chewing or swallowing  difficulty moving the jaw or tongue  swelling of the jaw that causes dentures to fit poorly or become uncomfortable  loosening of the teeth or pain around the teeth or jaw  voice changes  a lump or mass in the neck  weight loss  persistent bad breath
  • 35. Patient Workup  History  Clinical examination  Investigations
  • 36. Patient Workup  Investigations : Primary: photographs incisional biopsy FNAC Orthopantogram CXR ECG Routin blood investigations
  • 37. Patient Workup Investigations: for staging - CT face + neck ± CT chest - MRI - USG of neck or primary ± USG guided FNAC of suspicious lymphadenopathy - PET
  • 38. INVESTIGATIONS FOR RECONSTRUCTION  Allen’s test of vascular supply to hand if a radial forearm flap anticipated.  MRA of leg vessels if composite fibula reconstruction anticipated.  Colour Doppler of chest , abdomen if DCIA(deep circumflex iliac artery) free flap anticipated  CAD/CAM models if complex composite reconstruction  Dental impression for all maxillary tumours
  • 39. STAGING OF THE DISEASE American joint committee on cancer: T , N ,M Tx- primary tumour cannot be assessed T0- No evidence of primary tumour T1- ≤ 2cm in greatest dimension T2- 4cm < 2cm> in greatest dimension T3- > 4cm in greatest dimension
  • 40. STAGING OF THE DISEASE T4a- Oral cavity: tumour invades through cortical bone, into deep(extrinsic) muscle of tongue, maxillary sinus or skin. Lips: cortical bone, inferior alveolar nerve, floor of mouth, skin i.e. chin or nose. T4b- involves masticator space, pterygoid plates, skull base and/or encases internal carotid artery
  • 41. STAGING OF THE DISEASE N stage: Nx- regional lymph nodes can not be assessed. N0- no regional lymph node metastasis. N1- metastasis in a single ipsilateral lymph node ≤ 3cm in greatest dimension. N2a- metastasis in a single ipsilateral LN > 3cm but < 6cm in greatest dimension.
  • 42. STAGING OF THE DISEASE N2b- metastasis in multiple ipsilateral LNs, none > 6cm in greatest dimension. N2c- metastasis in B/L or C/L LNs, none > 6 cm. N3- metastasis in a LN > 6 cm in greatest dimension M stage: Mx- cannot be assessed, M0- no distant metastasis, M1- distant metastasisi.
  • 43. Stage Grouping Stage 0 Tis N0 M0 Stage I T1 N0 M0 Stage II T2 N0 M0 Stage III T1, T2 N1 M0 T3 N0, N1 M0 Stage IV A T1, T2, T3 N2 M0 T4a N0, N1, N2 M0 Stage IV B Any T N3 M0 T4b Any N M0 Stage IV C Any T Any N M1
  • 44. TREATMENT  Treatment goals: to eradicate primary tumor and LN metastasis, to maintain function, cosmetic reconstruction  Factors affecting choice of treatment: tumor factor patient factor resource factor
  • 45. Treatment Goals for Cancer of the Oral Cavity  • Cure of cancer  • Preservation or restoration of form and function  • Avoid or minimize sequelae of treatment  • Prevent second primary cancers
  • 46.
  • 47. TUMOR FACTORS AFFECTING TREATMENT  • Site  • Size (T stage)  • Location  • Multiplicity  • Proximity to bone  • Pathological features  • Histology, grade, depth of invasion, tumor  type  • Status of cervical lymph nodes  • Previous treatment
  • 48. TREATMENT  Patient factors: age, general medical condition, performance status, occupation, lifestyle(smoking/drinking) socioeconomic considerations previous treatment
  • 49. TREATMENT  Physician factors: surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy nursing & rehabilitation services, dental, prosthetics, support services
  • 50. Treatment  Surgery  Radiotherapy  Chemotherapy  Immunotherapy  Targeted therapy  Gene therapy
  • 51. Treatment of Choice  Stage I , II: single modality treatment is effective and preferable.  Stage III , IV: multimodal therapy is essential
  • 52. TREATMENT  SURGERY: Early stage T1/2No tumor: Wide excision +/ - ND High risk of locoregional recurrent (40%)  Management of No Neck : High incidence of occult metastasis in the clinically No Neck (15-43%) Controversy : Observation or Surgery/Radiation Depend on primary site. Should be have minimal morbidity ELND if risk of occult meta >20%. (SND/SOHND).  Locally advanced tumor: Combined modality treatment
  • 53. Classification of ND 1991 Classification: 2001 Classification:  RND  RND  Modified RND  Modified RND  Selective ND:  Selective ND (SND): Supraomohyoid SND (L.I-III/IV) Lateral SND (L.II-IV) Posterolateral SND (L.II-V) Anterior SND (L.VI)  Extended ND  Extended ND Proposed by American HN Society and AAOHNS
  • 54. Selective neck dissection Modified RND type 1,2,3.
  • 55. Standard treatment options for management of lymph node: Radiation therapy alone or neck dissection: N1 (0–2 cm). N2b or N3; all nodes smaller than 2 cm. (A combined surgical and radiation therapy approach should also be considered.) Radiation therapy and neck dissection: N1 (2–3 cm), N2a, N3. Surgery followed by radiation therapy, indications for which are as follows: Multiple positive nodes. Contralateral subclinical metastases. Invasion of tumor through the capsule of the lymph node. N2b or N3 (one or more nodes in each side of the neck, as appropriate, >2 cm). Radiation therapy prior to surgery: Large fixed nodes.
  • 56. SURGICAL APPROACHES  Trans-oral approach  Lower cheek approach  Upper cheek approach  mandibulotomy  Visor flap
  • 57. Surgical approach depends on  • Tumor size  • Tumor site  • Tumor location  • Proximity to mandible or maxilla  • Need for neck dissection  • Need for reconstructive surgery
  • 58. SURGICAL MARGINS  UK Royal college of pathologist guidelines:  Clear margin: histological clearance >5mm  Close margins: 1-5mm  Positive margin: <1mm  Incidence higher in oral cavity cancer than other HN sites.  Potentially due to complex anatomy and 3D
  • 59. Factors predicting positive margin  Large tumour.  Perineural spread.  Vascular permeation.  Noncohesive invasive front  Cervical metastasis
  • 60. RADIOTHERAPY  Applications: - Radical : early tongue, fom cancer - palliative : advanced total control not possible: 20Gy x5 daily fractions x 1 week. -combined therapy. -preoperative. -postoperative.
  • 61. RADIOTHERAPY  Small (T1/T2), superficial (<5mm thickness) lesions of tongue & FOM: interstitial brachytherapy.  Dose: 60 Gy/6days with iridium-192
  • 62. POST-OP RT Indications: -presence of nodal disease with exptracapsular spread. -presence of involved surgical margin -excision margin less than 5mm. -stage III/IV. -perineural or vascular invasion. -poor differentiation. -oral cavity primary. -multicentric primary. ->4 nodes positive. -soft tissue invasion. -dysplasia or carcinoma insitu at resection margin.
  • 63. IMMUNOTHERAPY  Based on two principles: -immune system should recognise and destroy abnormal cells. - tumor cells are poorly immunogenic and strongly immunosuppressive. . Tumors downregulate antigen presenting molecule . PGE2 produced by tumors inhibit lymphocyte proliferation. . Cytokines produced by tumors inhibit lymphocytes function.
  • 64. IMMUNOTHERAPY  IL-2 : stimulate growth, diffrentiation and survival of cytotoxic T cells. -systemic injection associated with sever reaction. - Local injection in tumour: short half life requiring frequent injections. -IRX2 human cytokine mixture injected perilymphatically near tumour: in clinical trial
  • 65. IMMUNOTHERAPY  A trial of IRX-2 in patients with squamous cell carcinomas of the head and neck(Hadden J, et. al. Int Immunopharmacology. 2003 Aug;3(8):1073-81: using immunotherapy with 10-20 days of perilymphatic injections of a natural cytokines mixture (NCM:IRX2;200 units IL2 equivalence) Found - significant reduction in tumour mass. -increased area of leukocyte infiltration
  • 66. IMMUNOTHERAPY  Non-Specific Active Immunomodulation  BCG vaccine  Used to induce active, non specific stimulation of the immune system  Reports of increased tumor free survival which could not be substantiated  Trials with other vaccines (strep pyogenes, trypanosoma cruzi, levamisole) show no benefits in long term survival
  • 67. IMMUNOTHERAPY  HPV Vaccines  Estimated that 25% of HNSCC are HPV associated  Tend to arise in younger patients  Lingual and palatine tonsils  Occur predominantly in non smoker/drinker  Associated with a more favorable prognosis  HPV viral oncogenes E6 and E7 are consistently expressed in HPV associated cancers  Thought to integrate into the host DNA, and when expressed, bypass the regulation of cell proliferation  Both protein and DNA vaccines targeting HPV DNA are currently in phase I and phase II trials
  • 68. TARGETED THERAPY  Targeted therapy in head and neck cancer: state of the art 2007 and review of clinical applications( Langer CJ. Cancer 2008 Jun 15;112(12):2635-45: -anti-EGFR monoclonal antibody(MoAb) cetuximab first targeted therapy to be developed -single agent cetuximab confer clinical benefits in patient with cisplatin refractory metastatic disease.
  • 69. TARGETED THERAPY  Molecular targeted therapies in head and neck cancer - An update of recent developments(Martin Goerner, et.al, Head & Neck Oncology 2010, 2:8): -anti-EGFR MoAbs :cetuximab , pantimumab, zalutumumab -EGFR targeted tyrosine kinase inhibitors: gefitinib, erlotinib - EGFR & HER-2 combined tyrosine kinase inhibitors: lapatinib, BIBW-2992. - VEGFR inhibitor: bevacicumab, sorafenib, sunitinib.
  • 70. TARGETED THERAPY  Biologic Therapy in Head and Neck Cancer: A Road with Hurdles(Specenier P, et.al. ISRN Onco. 2012;2012:163752. Epub 2012 Jun 13): - Yet to meet their primary endpoint. - result with EGFR directed tyrosine kinase inhibitor disappointing. -other potential target include: insulin-like growth factor1 receptor(IGF-1R), insulin receptor(IR), histone deacetylases(HDAC), mammalian target of rapamycin(mTOR) , platelet derived growth factor receptor(PDGFR), heat shock protein90(HSP90), nuclear factor kappa-B(NF-kB), aurora A or B, and phosphatidylinositol3-kinase(PIK3CA).
  • 71. Positive correlations of Oct-4 and Nanog in oral cancer stem like cells and high grade oral squamous cell carcinoma( Chiou SH, et.al, clinical cancer research. 2008 Jul 1;14(13):4085-95: Enriched OC-SLC highly expressed stem/progenitor cell markers and transporter (Oct-4, Nanog, CD117, Nestin, CD113, ABCG2)
  • 72. GENE THERAPY  Gene therapy for oral squamous cell carcinoma: An overview( TR Saraswathi, et.al, Indian J Dent Res. 2007 Jul-Sep;18(3):120-3)  STRATEGIES: -gene addition therapy: reconstitution of wild type p-53 function with p-53 expressing adenovirus-> led to inhibition of SCC cell lines. - antisense RNA therapy: introducing a remedial gene that prevents expression of a specific defective gene: potential target E6 & E7 genes of HPV. - suicide gene therapy: introduction of a gene into a cell
  • 73. Recurrent lips & oral cavity cancer  Surgery is preferred, if radiation was used initially.  Surgery, radiation or combination if surgery used initially.  Chemotherapy , but no increase in survival demonstrated.  Other novel therapy method
  • 74. PROGNOSIS  Location/thickness/depth of primary tumor  Staging  Type of histology  Grading  Presence of perineural spread  Mandibular invasion  Ln extension (Level, size, exptracapsular)  Molecular markers (?)
  • 75. What happens after Treatment?  Speech and Swallowing Therapy  Follow-up tests  Chemoprevention  Watch for new symptoms  General health considerations
  • 76. Summary  The main problem of oral cancer is early detection  Surgery is still the most important modality in management of oral cancer.  Better understanding of molecular biology of HNSCC.  Bio-molecular markers can be used in the management of SCC oral cancer.  High risk of second primary cancer, Chemoprevention?

Editor's Notes

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