Oral Oncology
Volume 48, Issue 3 , Pages 240-248, March 2012

Clinical significance of molecular alterations in histologically negative surgical margins of head and neck cancer patients

  • Ana Carolina de Carvalho

      Affiliations

    • Laboratory for Molecular Cancer Biology, Department of Biological Sciences, Federal University of São Paulo, Rua Pedro de Toledo, 669, 11o andar, São Paulo, SP 04039-032, Brazil
  • ,
  • Luiz Paulo Kowalski

      Affiliations

    • Department of Head and Neck Surgery, Fundação Antônio Prudente, Hospital do Câncer A C Camargo, Rua Prof. Antonio Prudente, 211, São Paulo, SP 01509-010, Brazil
  • ,
  • Antônio Hugo José Fróes Marques Campos

      Affiliations

    • Department of Pathology, Fundação Antônio Prudente, Hospital do Câncer A C Camargo, Rua Prof. Antonio Prudente, 109, 1o andar, São Paulo, SP 01509-010, Brazil
  • ,
  • Fernando Augusto Soares

      Affiliations

    • Department of Pathology, Fundação Antônio Prudente, Hospital do Câncer A C Camargo, Rua Prof. Antonio Prudente, 109, 1o andar, São Paulo, SP 01509-010, Brazil
  • ,
  • André Lopes Carvalho

      Affiliations

    • Department of Head and Neck Surgery, Fundação PIO XII, Hospital de Câncer de Barretos, Av. Antenor Duarte Villela, 1331, Barretos, SP 14784-400, Brazil
  • ,
  • André Luiz Vettore

      Affiliations

    • Laboratory for Molecular Cancer Biology, Department of Biological Sciences, Federal University of São Paulo, Rua Pedro de Toledo, 669, 11o andar, São Paulo, SP 04039-032, Brazil
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +55 11 5539 6151; fax: +55 11 5571 8806.

published online 21 November 2011.

Summary 

The development of locoregional recurrence is the main reason for treatment failure in head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCC) and the remaining of tumor cells in surgical margins is associated with recurrence. Surgical margins are considered negative based on histologic assessment of the pathological specimen. However, this method lacks sensitivity in identifying cells that already started malignant transformation but have not yet developed a pathologic phenotype. We investigated the usefulness of assessing the expression of PTHLH, EPCAM, MMP9, LGALS1 and MET for the detection of molecular alterations in histologically negative surgical margins and determine the correlation of these tumor-related alterations with clinical and prognostic parameters. Differential gene expression was determined by quantitative RT–PCR analyses in normal mucosa, HNSCC and negative margin samples. Thirty-eight percent of the histologically negative surgical margins examined were margin-positive for overexpression of at least one of the genes evaluated. Moreover, MMP9 and PTHLH overexpression in the surgical margins was associated with the development of second primary tumors (p=0.002) and lower rates of local control (log rank test p=0.022; HR=4.186; p=0.035), respectively. These findings demonstrate that the overexpression of tumor-related genes in histologically negative surgical margins is a frequent event. The use of qRT–PCR may be an useful tool in detecting actually negative HNSCC surgical margins and the overexpression of specific genes in these margins could be helpful in the identification of patients with a higher risk of developing second primary tumors and local recurrences, thus aiding the surgeon in the delineation of the HNSCC resection extent and helping in the planning of adjuvant therapy.

Keywords: Gene expression, Head and neck neoplasms, Surgical margins, Local neoplasm recurrence, Second primary neoplasms, Field cancerization, Matrix metalloproteinase 9, Parathyroid hormone-related protein

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PII: S1368-8375(11)00878-5

doi:10.1016/j.oraloncology.2011.10.018

Oral Oncology
Volume 48, Issue 3 , Pages 240-248, March 2012