Clinical and epidemiological features of oral cancer in a medical school teaching hospital from 1994 to 2002: increasing incidence in women, predominance of advanced local disease, and low incidence of neck metastases

Authors

  • Marcelo D. Durazzo University of São Paulo; Faculty of Medicine; Hospital das Clínicas
  • Carlos Eugenio Nabuco de Araujo University of São Paulo; Faculty of Medicine; Hospital das Clínicas
  • José de Souza Brandão Neto University of São Paulo; Faculty of Medicine; Hospital das Clínicas
  • André de Souza Potenza University of São Paulo; Faculty of Medicine; Hospital das Clínicas
  • Pedro Costa University of São Paulo; Faculty of Medicine; Hospital das Clínicas
  • Flávio Takeda University of São Paulo; Faculty of Medicine; Hospital das Clínicas
  • Cristina Bianchi University of São Paulo; Faculty of Medicine; Hospital das Clínicas
  • Marcos R. Tavares University of São Paulo; Faculty of Medicine; Hospital das Clínicas
  • Gilberto de Britto e Silva Filho University of São Paulo; Faculty of Medicine; Hospital das Clínicas
  • Alberto R. Ferraz University of São Paulo; Faculty of Medicine; Hospital das Clínicas

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S1807-59322005000400006

Keywords:

Head and neck neoplasms, Mouth neoplasms, Neoplasm metastasis, Population at risk, Epidemiology

Abstract

PURPOSE: Description of clinical and epidemiological characteristics of patients who underwent surgery for oral cancer in a Medical School Teaching Hospital, and determination of differences with respect to other institutions and/or periods of time. METHOD: The charts of patients undergoing surgery for oral cancer from 1994 to 2002 were reviewed. Data were collected in a spreadsheet in order to analyze clinical and epidemiological features.. RESULTS: A total of 374 patients having undergone 406 operations was identified. Their ages varied from 14 to 94 years (mean = 57.4 years), with 255 men (68.2%), and 295 out 366 Caucasian (80.6%). A majority had tumors of the tongue and/or floor of mouth (55.6%), while 20.3% had lip cancer. Squamous cell carcinoma was found in 90.3%, and glandular carcinoma in 4%. T4 tumors in 39.6%, Tis or T1 lesions in 15.2% of all patients. Nearly 62% had no regional metastases, and the relative incidence in young patients (40 years or younger) reached 8.6%. CONCLUSION: In spite of the predominance of locally advanced tumors, a majority of patients had no neck metastases. The 31.8% incidence in females indicates an increasing incidence of oral cavity cancer among women when compared to previous periods at the same institution.

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Published

2005-08-01

Issue

Section

Original Research

How to Cite

Clinical and epidemiological features of oral cancer in a medical school teaching hospital from 1994 to 2002: increasing incidence in women, predominance of advanced local disease, and low incidence of neck metastases . (2005). Clinics, 60(4), 293-298. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1807-59322005000400006