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      Prognostic factors in tongue cancer – relative importance of demographic, clinical and histopathological factors

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          Abstract

          The incidence of and mortality from squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the tongue have increased during the recent decades in the Western world. Much effort has been made to predict tumour behaviour, but we still lack specific prognostic indicators. The aim of our study was to evaluate the relative importance of the known demographic, clinical and histological factors in a homogeneous population-based group of patients with SCC of the mobile tongue. The demographic and clinical factors were reviewed retrospectively from primary and tertiary care patient files. Histological prognostic factors were determined from pre-treatment biopsies. The TNM stage was found to be the most important prognostic factor. In particular, local spread outside the tongue rather than spread to regional lymph nodes was related to poor prognosis. Several demographic and histopathological factors were closely related to TNM stage. When the cases were divided into stage I–II carcinomas and stage III–IV carcinomas, it appeared that the patient’s older age (> 65 years), a high malignancy score and an absence of overexpressed p53 protein were associated with a poorer prognosis in stage I–II carcinomas. Such cases may require more aggressive treatment. Among patients with stage III–IV carcinomas, heavy use of alcohol was significantly associated with a poor disease-specific survival time. © 2000 Cancer Research Campaign

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Br J Cancer
          British Journal of Cancer
          Nature Publishing Group
          0007-0920
          1532-1827
          16 August 2000
          September 2000
          : 83
          : 5
          : 614-619
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Departments of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery, [2 ]Diagnosticsand Oral Medicine, Institute of Dentistry, Oulu University Hospital, University of Oulu, Aapistie 3, Oulu, 90220, Finland
          [3 ]Departments of Otorhinolaryngology, [4 ]Pathology, Oulu University Hospital, P.O. Box 22, Oulu, 90221, Finland
          Author notes

          Last two authors have equally contributed to the work.

          Article
          6691323
          10.1054/bjoc.2000.1323
          2363505
          10944601
          9f7558b6-5ab2-401c-9b7b-9ca708b7eff5
          Copyright 2000, Cancer Research Campaign
          History
          : 13 October 1999
          : 08 May 2000
          : 08 May 2000
          Categories
          Regular Article

          Oncology & Radiotherapy
          immunohistochemistry,survival,squamous cell carcinoma
          Oncology & Radiotherapy
          immunohistochemistry, survival, squamous cell carcinoma

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