A labial biopsy technique is described and was used to study 40 patients with connective tissue disease and 60 postmortem subjects. More than one focus of lymphocytes per 4 sq mm of minor salivary tissue was found to be a consistent finding in patients with Sjögren's disease. The labial biopsy is shown to be a further valuable investigative procedure in such patients.
Tumourigenesis in experimental models is associated with the formation of new blood vessels (angiogenesis). Recent studies have suggested that tumour angiogenic activity may be inferred in histological sections by measuring the density of the vasculature. The purpose of this study was to determine whether the transition from normal to dysplastic and neoplastic tissue in the oral mucosa is accompanied by quantitative or qualitative changes in the vascularity of the tissue, and how the estimate of vascularity is influenced by the vessel marker and method of assessment. A total of 100 specimens of normal oral mucosa, dysplastic lesions, and squamous cell carcinomas were examined. Sections were immunostained with the pan‐endothelial antibodies to von Willebrand Factor (vWF) and CD31, or with an antibody to the αvβ3 integrin, previously reported to be a marker of angiogenic vessels. Vascularity was quantitated by two different methods: highest microvascular density (h‐MVD) and microvascular volume, as determined by point counting (MVV). The results showed that vascularity, measured by the MVV method using antibodies to either vWF or CD31, increased significantly (P<0·0001) with disease progression from normal oral mucosa, through mild, moderate, and severe dysplasia to early and late carcinoma (76 paraffin‐embedded tissues examined). In contrast, h‐MVD did not discriminate between dysplastic lesions and carcinoma. A similar percentage of the total vessel volume (MVV) and density (h‐MVD) were positive for αvβ3 in 24 frozen tissues examined, including normal oral mucosa. It is concluded that there is a close association between vascularity and tumour progression in the oral mucosa. Morphometric analysis reflecting microvascular volume is more informative than the currently popular analysis of microvascular density. The expression of αvβ3 in the vasculature of oral tissues does not necessarily reflect the presence of angiogenic vessels. © 1997 by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
The aim of this study was to assess whether vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) expression in oral tissues is associated with angiogenesis, disease progression or field cancerisation. Vascularity and VEGF immunoreactivity were quantified in 68 archival specimens including normal oral mucosa (NOM), dysplasia (DYS) and squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). Vascularity increased significantly with disease progression; it was also higher in NOM adjacent to SCC than in NOM from healthy tissue, suggesting an association with field cancerisation. VEGF expression in epithelial cells was evaluated using two antibodies and three indices. VEGF indices and vascularity were not directly correlated. The expression of VEGF was similar in all DYS and NOM specimens, whether or not adjacent to a concurrent lesion. A comparison of SCC with NOM or DYS led to opposite results, depending on the VEGF antibody and index used. We conclude that VEGF expression in the oral mucosa may play a physiological role, but does not appear to be associated with angiogenesis, field cancerisation or transition to dysplasia. Further studies concerned with tumour development require examining specific VEGF isoforms and standardisation of the methodology.
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