| Literature DB >> 23967796 |
Henning Hanken1, Juliane Kraatz, Ralf Smeets, Max Heiland, Alexandre Thomas Assaf, Marco Blessmann, Wolfgang Eichhorn, Till Sebastian Clauditz, Alexander Gröbe, Andreas Kolk, Madiha Rana.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The disease specific five-year survival rate especially for patients with advanced oral cancer has not improved significantly over the period of time. The most effective way of combating this dilemma is an early detection, diagnosis and eradication of early-stage lesions and their precursors. The use of VELscope® using an autofluorescence as a diagnostic tool might be useful in early detection of oral malignant lesions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23967796 PMCID: PMC3851797 DOI: 10.1186/1746-160X-9-23
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Head Face Med ISSN: 1746-160X Impact factor: 2.151
Study inclusion and exclusion criteria
| ● Oral premalignant lesion: | ● Tumor or tumor recurrences missing operability |
| ● (Leukoplakia, erythroplakia, lichen planus or pemphigus vulgaris) | ● Foreseeable missing opportunity of follow-up examination |
| ● Age | ● Pregnancy, heart-, pulmonal-, liver- and kidney disease, chronic pain syndrome nursing, drug addiction, recent operations, and diseases like heart, metabolism, CNS, infectious, circulation, systemic, malignant and immune system affecting diseases as well as blood coagulation disorders and allergic reactions to pharmaceuticals and antibiotics |
| ● Written informed consent | ● Dermatological diseases of the face |
Baseline characteristics of group 1 and group 2
| Age, range | 38-82 | 41-76 |
| Gender, n (%) | | |
| Male | 20 (33.3%) | 25 (41.7%) |
| Female | 40 (66.7%) | 35 (58.3%) |
| Smoking, n (%) | ||
| Never | 10 (16.7%) | 7 (11.7%) |
| Previous | 13 (21.7%) | 7 (11.7%) |
| Actual | 37 (61.7%) | 46 (76.7%) |
| Alcohol, n (%) | ||
| Never | 2 (3.3%) | 0 (0%) |
| ≤ 20 g/d | 23 (38.3%) | 19 (31.7%) |
| 21 – 40 g/d | 25 (41.7%) | 32 (53.3%) |
| 41 – 60 g/d | 6 (10.0%) | 4 (6.7%) |
| 61 – 80 g/d | 8 (13.3%) | 5 (8.3%) |
| Unknown | 0 | 0 |
| Biopsy taken, n (%) | ||
| Yes | 60 (100%) | 60 (100%) |
| No | 0 | 0 |
Figure 1This representative mucosal biopsy of the oral cavity shows regular squamous epithelium (Figure 1 left side) and a high-grade epithelial dysplasia. In comparison, the dysplasia on the right hand side of the picture shows a loss of maturation and nuclear atypia, like high nuclear-to-cytoplasmic ratio and nuclear irregularity, involving the whole squamous cell layer of the mucosa. Invasive tumour growth was not found.
Pathohistological findings group 1
| White light: | 2 (4.4) | 39 (86.7) | 4 (8.9) |
| White light: | 0 (0) | 13 (86.7) | 2 (13.3) |
Figure 2Oral cavity with precancerous lesion of planum buccale.
Figure 3Oral cavity with VELscope examination, the arrow shows the region of loss of fluorescence.
Pathohistological findings group 2
| VELscope: | 1 (1.8) | 46 (83.6) | 8 (14.5) |
| VELscope: | 0 (0) | 1 (20) | 4 (80) |
Sensitivity and specificity with according 95% confidence intervals for the two diagnostic procedures
| Difference (white light and Velscope – white light) | 22.0% | | 8.4% | |
| White light | 75.9% | 65%–87% | 33.3% | 0%–71% |
| White light and VELscope | 97.9% | 94%–100% | 41.7% | 14%–70% |