| Literature DB >> 32370133 |
Francesco Inchingolo1, Luigi Santacroce2,3, Andrea Ballini4,5, Skender Topi6,7, Gianna Dipalma1, Kastriot Haxhirexha8, Lucrezia Bottalico3,8, Ioannis Alexandros Charitos3.
Abstract
Aim: This historical medical literature review aims at understanding the evolution of the medical existence of oral cancer over times, particularly better comprehending if the apparent lower prevalence of this type of cancer in antiquity is a real value due to the absence of modern environmental and lifestyle factors or it is linked to a misinterpretation of ancient foreign terms found in ancient medical texts regarding oral neoplasms.Entities:
Keywords: history of medicine; history of oral surgery; oral cancer; oral infections; oral surgery
Year: 2020 PMID: 32370133 PMCID: PMC7246763 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17093168
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Overview of the main steps of the knowledge about oral cancer and its therapy.
| Historical Timeline on Oral Cancer | |
|---|---|
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| Main Events |
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| Edwin Smith and Ebers’ Egyptian papyri descriptions of cancers |
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| The encyclopedic Sanskrit medical text, Sushruta Samhita, describes different head and neck cancers. |
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| Pythagorean Alcmaeon’s of Croton studies on the oral sensory system in “Περι Φυσεως” (About Nature). |
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| Hippocrates’ work “Ιπποκρατικό Σώμα” (Corpus Hippocraticum) first uses the terms cancer/carcinoma (καρκίνος/καρκίνωμα) |
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| Galen’s use of the term oncos (όγκοs) to describe the tumor in the treatise “Παρὰ φύσιν ὄγκοι” (On Tumours against Nature), describing also pharmacological and surgical treatment. |
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| Greek Byzantine and later Arab’s medical texts with detailed descriptions of head/neck and oral cancers (Byzantine diagnostic and therapeutic procedures took place in |
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| Andreas Vesalius writes one of the most influential books on anatomical studies, “De humani corporis fabrica” (On the Human Body’s Factory). |
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| Infectious theories about origin of cancer. First hospital for cancer patients in Rheims, France |
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| Introduction of general anaesthesia in 1846 allowed increasing cancer excisions with the development of many surgical access routes for oral cancer. |
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| Henry T. Butlin, head and neck surgeon, describes in his book “Diseases of the Tongue” an even more radical dissection of the primary tumor “ |
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| G.W. Crile (1864-1943) publishes two papers describing a systematic and radical approach to “ |
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| Hayes Martin’s team carries out 1,450 radical neck dissections on patients with oral cancers and cervical metastases. |
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| Osvaldo Suarez proposes a ‘‘functional or modified neck dissection’’ preserving the accessory nerves and their functions. |
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| Shah et al. demonstrate that the risk of metastasis in nodes of 1,801 patients in levels IV and V was only 9% and 2%, so they concluded that their radical removal in not indispensable in N0 neck cancers. |
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| The American Head and Neck Society standardizes neck dissection terminology and techniques, dividing neck nodes in a 6-level classification system. |
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| Even more super-selective nodes dissections in early tumours with multi-integrated pharmacological therapies and reconstructive surgery. |
Summary of established and presumed risk factors for Oral Cancer.
| Precursor Conditions | Environmental Factors | Genetic Factors |
|---|---|---|
| Infections: HPV, EBV, HIV, | Lifestyle | Fanconi’s anemia |
| Chronic mouth’s irritation | Low socio-economic status | Hereditary genodermatoses (dyskeratosis congenita, xeroderma pigmentosum, scleroderma) |
| Immune suppression and immune disorders (i.e., trans-planted patients, due to the chronic inflammatory state associated with graft-versus host disease (GVHD) | Industrial pollution or occupational exposures (sulfuric acid, asbestos, formaldehyde, pyrene, methyl pyrene, leather and textile industries workers) | Plummer-Vinson (aka Patterson-Brown-Kelly) syndrome |
| Dietary factors | Genetic polymorphisms of genes coding for enzymes | |
| Radiation exposure | Diabetes |
The most important viruses associated with oral cancers and their molecular effects in the host.
| Most Important Viruses Associated to Oral Cancers | |
|---|---|
| Virus | Host Events |
| It stimulates B lymphocytes proliferation and LMP1 production → essential for lymphocytes B transformation | |
| It has been implicated with other Herpesviruses in the etiology of several human carcinomas | |
| It is associated with various types of oral lesions: vulgar wart (HPV-4), papillomas (HPV-11), vulgar warts in HIV+ pts (HPV-7), acuminate condylomata and leukoplakia (HPV-6) and squamous cell carcinoma (HPV-16 >98% is associated and HPV-18) | |
| It causes oral carcinoma only if associated with TAR (tobacco associated residues): TAR molecules block the synthesis of DNA polymerase, thymidine kinases, γ proteins → interference with viral shedding → increase of infected cell α-proteins (ICP4 and ICP27) | |