| Literature DB >> 28292008 |
Kamal Niaz1,2,3, Faheem Maqbool1,2,3, Fazlullah Khan1,2,3, Haji Bahadar4, Fatima Ismail Hassan1,2,3, Mohammad Abdollahi1,2,3.
Abstract
Smokeless tobacco consumption, which is widespread throughout the world, leads to oral submucous fibrosis (OSMF), which is a long-lasting and devastating condition of the oral cavity with the potential for malignancy. In this review, we mainly focus on the consumption of smokeless tobacco, such as paan and gutkha, and the role of these substances in the induction of OSMF and ultimately oral cancer. The list of articles to be examined was established using citation discovery tools provided by PubMed, Scopus, and Google Scholar. The continuous chewing of paan and swallowing of gutkha trigger progressive fibrosis in submucosal tissue. Generally, OSMF occurs due to multiple risk factors, especially smokeless tobacco and its components, such as betel quid, areca nuts, and slaked lime, which are used in paan and gutkha. The incidence of oral cancer is higher in women than in men in South Asian countries. Human oral epithelium cells experience carcinogenic and genotoxic effects from the slaked lime present in the betel quid, with or without areca nut. Products such as 3-(methylnitrosamino)-proprionitrile, nitrosamines, and nicotine initiate the production of reactive oxygen species in smokeless tobacco, eventually leading to fibroblast, DNA, and RNA damage with carcinogenic effects in the mouth of tobacco consumers. The metabolic activation of nitrosamine in tobacco by cytochrome P450 enzymes may lead to the formation of N-nitrosonornicotine, a major carcinogen, and micronuclei, which are an indicator of genotoxicity. These effects lead to further DNA damage and, eventually, oral cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Areca; Fibrosis; Oral cancer; Prevalence; Smokeless tobacco
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28292008 PMCID: PMC5543298 DOI: 10.4178/epih.e2017009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Health ISSN: 2092-7193
Some common forms of oral smokeless tobacco and their constituents
| Common/native name | Ingredients | Countries/populations |
|---|---|---|
| Sodium carbonate and tobacco | Sudan | |
| Tobacco, slaked lime, and ash | Saudi Arabia | |
| Tobacco, slaked lime, indigo, cardamom, oil, and menthol | Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Central Asia | |
| Tobacco, ash, cotton, and sesame oil | Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Central Asia | |
| Areca nut, lime, and tobacco | India | |
| Tobacco and molasses | Central India | |
| Boiled tobacco | India and Arab countries | |
| Areca nut, betel leaf, slaked lime, spice, and catechu, with or without tobacco | Indian subcontinent, New Guinea, Southeast Asia, and South America | |
| Burned tobacco | India |
Figure 1.Flow diagram of the included studies. The flow chart presents the number of citations and resources that were screened, excluded, and/or included in the review.
Summary of the risk factors for oral cancer in various Asian countries
| Country | Associated risk factors | Study design | No. of subjects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Taiwan | Quid without tobacco, smoking, alcohol, heavy metals, HPV, SEC | Questionnaire-based | 4906 | [ |
| Vietnam | Quid with tobacco | Visitors to cancer centers and institute of odontology, relevant publications in Vietnamese, interviews with betel quid vendors and individual betel quid users | _ | [ |
| Pakistan | Structured questionnaires | 425 | [ | |
| Sri Lanka | Betel quid, tobacco | Cross-sectional community-based study | 1,029 | [ |
| Yemen | Cigarette smoking, smokeless tobacco, quid with tobacco | History-based study | 649 | [ |
| India | Quid with or without tobacco, smokeless tobacco, alcohol, bidi and cigarette smoking, HPV, diet, SEC | Nested case-control design | 1,692 | [ |
| Philippines | Quid, smoking | Case-control study | 566 | [ |
| Thailand | Family history of cancer, alcohol, smoking, quid with tobacco | Case-control study | 104 | [ |
| Malaysia | Malnutrition, HPV | Research analysis of frozen samples of oral tissue | 210 | [ |
| Nepal | Bidi | Epidemiological study | Population aged more than 15 yr | [ |
| Turkey | Malnutrition, alcohol, cigarette smoking, SEC | Case-control study | 140 | [ |
HPV, human papillomavirus; SEC, socioeconomic conditions.
Figure 2.Roles of paan and gutkha in oral submucous fibrosis [42,43]. ROS, reactive oxygen species.
Figure 3.Initial events in the pathogenesis of mouth cancer [56,63]. IL-6, interleukin-6; If-α, interferon-alpha; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; TGF-β, transforming growth factor-beta.
Studies of the genotoxicity of paan and gutkha
| Study | Source | Endpoints |
|---|---|---|
| BC | MN | |
| Tobacco [ | EOMC | MN |
| Betel quid, areca, and tobacco [ | BC and PBL | CA and MN |
| Tobacco [ | EBC and PBL | MN and CA |
| CC | CA, SCE, and MN | |
| TRP | QBT | |
| Lime [ | EOMC | CT and MN |
| Slaked lime [ | PMB | HE |
| Areca nut [ | STS | Mutagenicity |
| Areca nut [ | HBEC | CFFA, NRA, TRA |
| Ovary cells | SCE and CA | |
| Tobacco products [ | ME, CTLE | Ames assay |
| Catechu [ | Liver tissue | Ames assay |
| Arecoline [ | BMC | SCE |
| Mice | SCE | |
| PBL | SCE, CA, and MN | |
| HOK | NHOKs | |
| BPL | MN, CA, and SCE | |
| Tobacco [ | VTF | DTT |
| Mice | MA | |
| Betel quid/ | TRP | QBT |
| Tobacco [ | SNT | DTT |
| BMC | MN | |
| Tobacco, areca nuts, and betel leaf [ | PBL and BC | MN and CA |
| Tobacco [ | PBL and EBC | CA and MN |
| Rats | MEA |
SCE, sister chromatid exchange; CA, chromosomal aberrations; STS, Salmonella typhimurium strains; PMB, popular band of paan; TRP, tobacco and its related products; CC, cultured cells; EBC, exfoliated buccal mucosal cells; PBL, peripheral blood lymphocytes; BC, buccal cells; MN, micronuclei; QBT, questionnaire about betel quid type; HBEC, human buccal epithelial cells; BMC, bone marrow cells; EOMC, exfoliated oral mucosal cells; ME, extract of masher; HOK, human oral keratinocytes; SNT, smoking and non-smoking forms of tobacco; CTLE, chewing tobacco and lime; MA, morphological abnormalities; NHOKs, normal human oral keratinocytes; CT, chemiluminescence technique; HE, histological examination; CFFA, colony-forming efficiency assay; VTF, various tobacco forms; NRA, neutral red uptake assay; TRA, trypan blue exclusion assay; MEA, marker of enzyme activities.
Figure 4.Molecular mechanism of gutkha [90,91]. CYP, cytochrome polymorphism; GST-μ, μ-glutathione-s-transferase; TNF, tumor necrosis factor.