Difficulty in precise decision making on necessity of surgery is a major problem when managing oral squamous cell carcinomas (OSCCs) with clinically negative neck. Therefore, use of clinical and histopathological parameters in combination would be important to improve patient management. The main objective is to develop a model that predicts the presence of nodal metastasis in patients with OSCC.623 patients faced neck dissections with buccal mucosal or tongue squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) were selected from patients’ records. Demographic data, clinical information, nodal status, Depth of invasion (DOI) and pattern of invasion (POI) were recorded. The parameters which showed a significant association with nodal metastasis were used to develop a multivariable predictive model (PM). Univariate logistic regression was used to estimate the strengths of those associations in terms of odds ratios (OR). This showed statistically significant associations between status of the nodal metastasis and each of the following 4 histopathological parameters individually: size of the tumour (T), site, POI, and DOI. Specifically, OR of nodal metastasis for tongue cancers relative to buccal mucosal cancers was 1.89, P-value < 0.001. Similarly, ORs for POI type 3 and 4 relative to type 2 were 1.99 and 5.83 respectively. A similar relationship was found with tumour size; ORs for T2, T3, and T4 compared to T1 were 2.79, 8.27 and 8.75 respectively. These four histopathological parameters were then used to develop a predictive model for nodal metastasis. This model showed that probability of nodal metastasis is higher among tongue cancers with increasing POI, with increasing T, and with larger depths while other characteristics remained unchanged. The proposed model provides a way of using combinations of histopathological parameters to identify patients with higher risks of nodal metastasis for surgical management.
Langerhans cell histiocytosis(LCH) is a disease characterized by clonal proliferation and excessive accumulation of disseminated forms of dendritic Langerhans cells. The aims of thestudy were to describe clinico-pathological presentations of thirteen new cases of LCH of the oral cavity and to present its differential diagnoses. The majority of 61.53% (8/13) of cases occurred in infants and adolescents with female predominance (61.53%). Out of all the lesions,61.53 % occurred intraosseously;with majority 53.82% (7/13) presenting on the posterior mandible and 15.38% (2/13)in the anterior mandible.Five lesions extended to involve more than one site. Radiologically all intraosseous lesions presented as osteolytic lesions with ill-defined or well defined margins. A wide range of clinical differential diagnoses including malignancies have been proposed indicating the aggressive clinical presentations exhibited by some lesions. Histopathologically, all lesions at first glance resembled an infection/chronic inflammatory process and contained mixed inflammatory cells including eosinophils. Deep fungal infections and traumatic ulcerative granuloma with stromal eosinophilia (TUGSE) were the two main histopathological differential diagnoses that were considered for hard tissue and soft tissue lesions respectively. Round mononuclear cells, containing eosinophilic cytoplasms and peripheral indented cerebriform nuclei were only observed under higher magnification. Immunohistochemical investigations with S-100 antibody reveled nuclear and cytoplasmic positivity in mononuclear cells confirming these cells as Langerhans cells. All the patients were treated with complete surgical excision with or without chemo/radiotherapyand are under follow up care. In conclusion, as LCH of oral cavity may have a broad spectrum of clinico-pathological presentations, high degree of clinical awareness is required to arrive at the definitive diagnosis. The histopathological diagnosis is reliable with immunohistochemical confirmation of the Langerhans cell. However, awareness of its differential diagnosis is important to avoid misdiagnosis; resulting in incorrect management.
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