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Establishing a role for the oral microbiome in infectious complications following major oral cavity cancer surgery. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • * Current research has identified some risk factors for these infections, such as patient health and surgical details, but changes based on these factors haven’t significantly reduced infection rates.
  • * Understanding how the oral microbiome contributes to these complications could lead to new, targeted treatments that may lower infection rates and improve recovery for patients undergoing oral cancer surgery.

Article Abstract

Surgery forms the backbone of treatment for most locoregional or advanced oral cavity squamous cell carcinoma. Unfortunately, infectious complications (including orocutaneous fistulas) are common following such extensive surgery and can afflict over half of patients. These complications can lead to delays in adjuvant treatment, prolonged hospitalization, reconstructive failure, and decreased quality of life. The frequency and morbidity associated with infectious complications has led to the search for pre-disposing risk factors; and, several have been identified, including both patient (e.g. diabetes) and surgical (e.g. operative time) factors. However, these findings are inconsistently reproduced, and risk factor modification has had a limited impact on rates of infectious complications. This is striking given that the likely contaminant-the oral microbiome-is a well-studied microbial reservoir. Because many oral cavity cancer surgeries involve violation of oral mucosa and the spillage of the oral microbiome into normally sterile areas (e.g. the neck), variance in oral microbiome composition and function could underly differences in infectious complications. The goal of this perspective is to highlight 1) this knowledge gap and 2) opportunities for studies in this domain. The implication of this line of thought is that the identification of oral microbial dysbiosis in patients undergoing surgery for oral cavity cancer could lead to targeted pre-operative therapeutic interventions, decreased infectious complications, and improved patient outcomes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.oraloncology.2024.106926DOI Listing

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