Background: A proportion of early-stage node-negative oral squamous carcinoma patients fail despite complete surgical resection. Adjuvant treatment in early oral cancer is controversial and is often individualized based on stage, depth, and margin status.
Aims: We reviewed various histological markers in pT1/T2N0 cases, resected upfront with elective nodal dissection, with an emphasis on tumor-tissue interface characteristics of the worst pattern of invasion (WPOI), tumor cell nest size (sCNS), budding and lymphocytic host response (LHR), to assess their prognostic significance.
Depth of invasion (DOI) and tumour thickness (TT) are known prognostic indicators in oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC), but varying definitions have been used by pathologists for reporting. The American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) has proposed adoption of a uniform definition of DOI and incorporated this measurement in the revised TNM staging (8th edition); however, unambiguous DOI determination can be a challenge in clinical practice. We reviewed archived slides of 95 cases of T1/T2N0 OSCC and listed the challenges in accurate DOI measurement with pictographical documentation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIndian J Pathol Microbiol
March 2017
Xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis is an uncommon inflammatory condition accounting for 1% of chronic pyelonephritis cases. Clinically and radiologically it mimics other renal space occupying lesions. Hence, correct preoperative diagnosis is not possible in all cases and nephrectomy is done in most patients.
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