Title: A study of Clinico-pathological Spectrum of Oral Cavity Lesions at a Tertiary Care Hospital

Authors: Sharma Priyanka, Gupta Karuna, Saini Sunita, Yadav Ajay

 DOI:  https://dx.doi.org/10.18535/jmscr/v6i4.45

Abstract

Introduction: Various inflammatory, autoimmune and infectious diseases show their expression in oral cavity. Benign tumours are more common than malignant tumours. High incidence of oral cancer has been associated with tobacco chewing and smoking habits, an important factor for oral cancers in India.

Materials and Methods: A cross sectionalstudy was carried out in Department of Pathology, SMS Medical College, Jaipur (Rajasthan) during the year 2016-2017. Total 150 specimens of oral cavity lesions, received during study period were taken. Details about clinical history, histopathological examination and immunohistochemistry were taken and analyzed.

Results: Oral cavity lesions showed male predominance with highest prevalence in 30-59 years of life. Malignant tumours were 2.7 times as common as benign. Buccal mucosa was the most common site for malignant oral neoplasm followed by tongue. 64% of all malignant neoplasm appeared at these two sites. Squamous cell carcinoma was the most common histopathological lesion. A positive tobacco chewing history was found among three-fourth of cases (76.09%).

Conclusion: The present study concluded that majority of oral cavity lesions were malignant in nature. Tobacco chewing, in form of zarda/gutka was a major risk factor associated with oral cancers. Oral cavity is the easily accessible site for self-examination and clinical inspection at regular interval, so early diagnosis of malignant lesions can be possible. Any lesion in the oral cavity should be evaluated histo-pathologically to rule out malignancy.

Keywords: Oral cavity lesions, Histopathology, Benign, Malignant, Tobacco.

References

  1. Strengthening the prevention of oral cancer; the WHO perspective. Community Dentistry Oral Epidemiology. 2005;33:397-99.
  2. Ries LAG, Eisner MP, Kosary CL, et al. Edward BK, editor. SEER cancer statistics review. Bethesda (MD):National cancer institute;1975-2002.
  3. John D McDowell. An overview of epidemiology and common risk factors for oral squamous cell carcinoma. Otolaryngol Clin N Am. 2006;39:277-294.
  4. Modi D, Laishram RS, Sharma LD, Debnath K. Pattern of oral cavity lesions in a tertiary care hospital in Manipur, India. J Med Soc. 2013;27:199-202.
  5. Claudia Fierro-Garibay, Nieves Almendros-Marques, Leonardo Berini-Aytes, Cosme Gay-Escoda. Prevalence of biopsied oral lesions in a Department of Oral Surgery. J ClinExp Dent. 2011;3(2):e73-7.
  6. Suri V, Arnav KR et al. Histopathological spectrum of benign and malignant lesions of oral cavity- An observational study in a tertiary care hospital in south west part of Punjab. IJCR. 2017;9(5):49888-49891.
  7. Agrawal R, Chauhan A, Kumar P. Spectrum of oral lesions in a Tertiary Care Hospital. J ClinDiagn Res. 2015 June;9(6):EC11-EC13.
  8. Saraswati TR, Ranganathan K, Shanmugam S, Ramesh S, Narasimhan PD, Gunaseelan R. Prevalence of oral lesions in relation to habits: Cross-sectional study in south India. Indian J Dent Res. 2006;17:121-125.
  9. Kosam S, Kujur P. Pattern of oral cavity lesion: A retrospective study of 350 cases. Int J Sci Stud. 2016;4(3):65-69.
  10. Atram MA, Bhalavi V, Dantkale S. A clinicopathological study of tumours and tumour like lesions of oral cavity. IJBAMR. June 2016;5(3):146-153.
  11. Zaib N, Sajid M, Iltaf A, Abbas S, Shaheen S. Oral biopsies: Study of 114 cases.Pakistan Oral & Dental Journal. 2012 Dec;32(3):
  12. Dowerah E and Bhuyan A P.Clinicopathological study of oral cavity neoplasm: experience at a tertiory care hospital of Assam, India. The clarion. 2014;3(2):1-6.
  13. Yuwanati MB, Tupkari JV. Fibrosarcoma of mandible: A case report. Case Rep Dent. 2011 536086.
  14. Reddy VS et al. Intraoral fibrosarcoma with variable histopathological pattern: A case report. J ClinDiagn Res. 2015;9 (7):ED04-06.
  15. Margaix-Muñoz M, Bagán J, Poveda-Roda R. Ewing sarcoma of the oral cavity: A review. J ClinExp Dent. 2017 Feb;9(2):e294-e301.
  16. Mishra S, Mishra YC. Minor salivary gland tumours in the Indian population: A series of cases over a 10-year period. Journal of Oral and Craniofacial research. 2014;4:174-180.
  17. Agrawal P, Saxena S et al. Demographics of salivary gland tumours: An Institutional study in western Uttar Pradesh. Int J Oral-Med Sci. 2014;13(2):75-80.
  18. Iype E M, Pandey M, Mathew A, Thomas G, Sebastian P, Nair M K. Oral cancer among patients under the age of 35 years. J Postgrad Med 2001;47:171-176.
  19. Bhat SP, Bhat V, Permi H, Shetty JK, Aroor R. Oral and orophryngeal malignancy: A clinicopathological study. IJPLM. 2016; 2(1):OA3.

Corresponding Author

Gupta Karuna

Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.