2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.bjoms.2009.07.012
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Squamous cell carcinoma of the maxillary gingiva, alveolus, and hard palate: is there a need for elective neck dissection?

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Cited by 70 publications
(57 citation statements)
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“…The rate of 13.3% of histopathological confirmed lymph node metastases recorded in the present study is below the listed range of 17-54% specifically mentioned for maxillary OSCC in related cohort studies [11,19,22,23,[27][28][29][30]. In 9.4% of patients with one-sided END (3/32), recurrent metastases occurred in the non-dissected side of the neck, that are assigned to initial clinical occult metastases by some authors and occur in 10-30% of the time [22,27,28,31], such as histopathological detected occult metastases after END [8,19,20,22,30] (Table 5). In the study of Mourouzis et al 2 out of 13 total patients with cN0-result developed cervical metastases (15%) in the course of 18 months [31].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 91%
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“…The rate of 13.3% of histopathological confirmed lymph node metastases recorded in the present study is below the listed range of 17-54% specifically mentioned for maxillary OSCC in related cohort studies [11,19,22,23,[27][28][29][30]. In 9.4% of patients with one-sided END (3/32), recurrent metastases occurred in the non-dissected side of the neck, that are assigned to initial clinical occult metastases by some authors and occur in 10-30% of the time [22,27,28,31], such as histopathological detected occult metastases after END [8,19,20,22,30] (Table 5). In the study of Mourouzis et al 2 out of 13 total patients with cN0-result developed cervical metastases (15%) in the course of 18 months [31].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…In 9.4% of patients with one-sided END (3/32), recurrent metastases occurred in the non-dissected side of the neck, that are assigned to initial clinical occult metastases by some authors and occur in 10-30% of the time [22,27,28,31], such as histopathological detected occult metastases after END [8,19,20,22,30] (Table 5). In the study of Mourouzis et al 2 out of 13 total patients with cN0-result developed cervical metastases (15%) in the course of 18 months [31]. In 8 cN0 cases with only observation in the study of Montes et al 3 patients developed late cervical metastasis (38%) in the course of 16 months [27].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Size of the primary tumor and histological grade was significantly associated with survival, and clinical stage was the most important prognostic indicator [30] . Recent retrospective series with 26 to 146 upper alveolar ridge and hard palate cases reported a neck lymph node involvement between 11% and 36.6%, and regional recurrence in N0 neck from 14% to 27% [1,[5][6][7][8] . These studies had several findings: cases with neck node involvement had higher grade; clinical stage but not margin status was associated with prognosis; and T3 (55%) and T4 (52%) tumors exhibited higher rates of neck lymph node involvement than smaller tumors (T1 = 15%; T2 = 28%).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Prognostic factors and neck management in head and neck SCC (HNSCC) have been extensively studied in series of tongue or floor of mouth SCC, or on series with a mixture of SCC tumor sites [2] . Only small retrospective series have evaluated the behavior of hard palate and upper alveolus, and suggest that they have a low rate of regional node metastases [3][4][5][6][7][8] . However, recent studies find higher rates of both neck lymph node involvement and neck recurrence in these malignancies, and, there is a need to identify those aggressive cases that would benefit from more aggressive treatment [9,10] .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%