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Quantitative assessment of tumor-associated tissue eosinophilia and mast cells in tumor proper and lymph nodes of oral squamous cell carcinoma

Background: Oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) is the most common cancer of oral cavity. Tumor stage, thickness, lymph node metastasis (LNM), extranodal spread, perineural invasion, tumor differentiation, mutations, human papillomavirus infection, and tumor microenvironment are independent prognost...

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Published in:Journal of oral and maxillofacial pathology : JOMFP 2018-01, Vol.22 (1), p.145-145
Main Authors: Jain, Shivani, Phulari, Rashmi, Rathore, Rajendrasinh, Shah, Arpan, Sancheti, Sankalp
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Phulari, Rashmi
Rathore, Rajendrasinh
Shah, Arpan
Sancheti, Sankalp
description Background: Oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) is the most common cancer of oral cavity. Tumor stage, thickness, lymph node metastasis (LNM), extranodal spread, perineural invasion, tumor differentiation, mutations, human papillomavirus infection, and tumor microenvironment are independent prognostic indicators of OSCC. However, clinically, among all factors, LNM is considered an important prognostic factor in OSCC as it not only determines the stage of disease but also the strongest independent factor which predicts recurrence of disease. Further research proves that there are several biologically important factors in tumor tissue and LNs which promote or defend LNM. While it is proposed that tumor-associated tissue eosinophils (TATE) and mast cells (MCs) have "immuno-protective" effect, this remains unproven and various researchers have conflicting opinion. Aim: The aim is to determine the presence of TATE and MCs in OSCC and to evaluate if any association exists between them and LNM. Study Design: It is a comparative-retrospective study between 2 groups including 35 OSCC cases positive and 35 negative for LNM. Materials and Methodology: Quantification of cells was done by counting total number of cells in 10 high-power fields under ×40 objective lens using "zigzag" method and dividing it by total number of fields. Eosinophils stained bright red with carbol chromotrope and MCs purple-violet with toluidine blue. Statistics: Independent t-test and Pearson's correlation were done using STATA IC 0.2 software. Level of significance was at 5%. Comparison of eosinophil and MC infiltration was done based on gender, metastatic, nonmetastatic LN, and in tumor proper. Results and Conclusion: This study showed weak positive correlation between mean eosinophils count in tumor and LNs. Recognition of TATE and MCs as integral to tumor biology opens an avenue for novel approaches to cancer therapies. We conclude that an increased number of immunological cells are a favorable prognostic indicator in OSCC.
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Tumor stage, thickness, lymph node metastasis (LNM), extranodal spread, perineural invasion, tumor differentiation, mutations, human papillomavirus infection, and tumor microenvironment are independent prognostic indicators of OSCC. However, clinically, among all factors, LNM is considered an important prognostic factor in OSCC as it not only determines the stage of disease but also the strongest independent factor which predicts recurrence of disease. Further research proves that there are several biologically important factors in tumor tissue and LNs which promote or defend LNM. While it is proposed that tumor-associated tissue eosinophils (TATE) and mast cells (MCs) have "immuno-protective" effect, this remains unproven and various researchers have conflicting opinion. Aim: The aim is to determine the presence of TATE and MCs in OSCC and to evaluate if any association exists between them and LNM. Study Design: It is a comparative-retrospective study between 2 groups including 35 OSCC cases positive and 35 negative for LNM. Materials and Methodology: Quantification of cells was done by counting total number of cells in 10 high-power fields under ×40 objective lens using "zigzag" method and dividing it by total number of fields. Eosinophils stained bright red with carbol chromotrope and MCs purple-violet with toluidine blue. Statistics: Independent t-test and Pearson's correlation were done using STATA IC 0.2 software. Level of significance was at 5%. Comparison of eosinophil and MC infiltration was done based on gender, metastatic, nonmetastatic LN, and in tumor proper. Results and Conclusion: This study showed weak positive correlation between mean eosinophils count in tumor and LNs. Recognition of TATE and MCs as integral to tumor biology opens an avenue for novel approaches to cancer therapies. 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Study Design: It is a comparative-retrospective study between 2 groups including 35 OSCC cases positive and 35 negative for LNM. Materials and Methodology: Quantification of cells was done by counting total number of cells in 10 high-power fields under ×40 objective lens using "zigzag" method and dividing it by total number of fields. Eosinophils stained bright red with carbol chromotrope and MCs purple-violet with toluidine blue. Statistics: Independent t-test and Pearson's correlation were done using STATA IC 0.2 software. Level of significance was at 5%. Comparison of eosinophil and MC infiltration was done based on gender, metastatic, nonmetastatic LN, and in tumor proper. Results and Conclusion: This study showed weak positive correlation between mean eosinophils count in tumor and LNs. Recognition of TATE and MCs as integral to tumor biology opens an avenue for novel approaches to cancer therapies. 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ispartof Journal of oral and maxillofacial pathology : JOMFP, 2018-01, Vol.22 (1), p.145-145
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subjects Angiogenesis
Biological markers
Biomarkers
Blood diseases
Cancer
Care and treatment
Development and progression
Diagnosis
Dissection
Eosinophilia
Health aspects
Human papillomavirus
Leukocytes (eosinophilic)
Lymph nodes
Lymphatic system
Mast cells
Metastases
Metastasis
Mutation
Oral cancer
Oral cavity
Oral squamous cell carcinoma
Original
Pathology
Patient outcomes
Prognosis
Research centers
Squamous cell carcinoma
Statistical analysis
Studies
Toluidine
Tumors
title Quantitative assessment of tumor-associated tissue eosinophilia and mast cells in tumor proper and lymph nodes of oral squamous cell carcinoma
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