The International Union Against Cancer (UICC) does not define the number of sections required from each regional lymph node to record pTNM classification. This study was designed to clarify the incidence of occult metastasis and to assess the pN upgrading of patients with oral cancer. Ultimately, this study led to a proposal for appropriate semiserial sectioning guidelines. Five hundred fifty-four nonmetastatic cervical lymph nodes taken from 73 patients with oral cancer were subjected to hematoxylin-eosin (HE) staining and keratin immunohistochemistry. Micrometastases, defined as foci ≤3 mm, were detected in 29 sites of 23 lymph nodes (4.2%) of 16 patients (21.9%). In 9 patients (12.3%) pN upgrading was needed: in 6 from pN0 to pN1, in 1 from pN0 to pN2b, and in 2 from pN1 to pN2b. The remaining 13 lymph nodes with occult metastasis were found in 5 pN2b and 2 pN2c patients, resulting in no pN upgrading. Occult metastasis was also detected in 6 small lymph nodes ≤5 mm in diameter. The average minor axis of the micrometastasis was 1.36±0.85 mm. We propose that the lymph nodes should be cut and examined at 1-mm intervals to detect micrometastatic foci and to evaluate the pN classification accurately.
Overexpression of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) is frequently observed in many solid tumor types, including head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCC). Recent laboratory experiments have demonstrated that high EGFR levels correlate with increased tumor resistance to radiation. This study investigated the relationship between EGFR expression levels and radiosensitivity in 5 HNSCC cell lines (HSC2, HSC3, HSC4, SCC25, and Ca9-22) and whether treatment with ZD1839 ('Iressa'), a selective EGFR-tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI), would improve tumor cell response to radiotherapy. ZD1839 suppressed the growth of HNSCC cell lines in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Radiosensitivity of these HNSCC cell lines, assessed by a clonogenic survival assay, differed greatly and the expression of EGFR varied. EGFR expression levels (EGFR numbers/cell) correlated with increased tumor resistance to radiation (f[x]= 4.54 X, R2 = 0.715; f[x]: EGFR numbers/cell, X: radiosensitivity; D10). Following exposure of the HNSCC cells to 1.0 microM ZD1839 and radiation (0-10 Gy), greater than additive growth inhibitory effects were observed. These results suggest that ZD1839 could enhance tumor radiosensitivity and inhibit tumor growth after radiation, indicating that this combination could have clinical potential in the treatment of patients with head and neck cancer.
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