Thirty-two cases of sarcomas involving the oral and maxillofacial region over a period of 25 years were reviewed. The age range was from 5 months to 77 years with a mean age of 42. The male to female ratio was 3:1. The sarcomas were located in the maxilla including the maxillary sinus (n= 13), mandible (n= 13), buccal mucosa (n= 3), temporomandibular fossa (n= 2), and submandibular region (n= 1). Histologically sarcomas were classified as osteosarcoma (n= 9), malignant fibrous histiocytoma (n= 7), rhabdomyosarcoma (n= 5), fibrosarcoma (n= 3), plasmacytoma (n= 2), leiomyosarcoma (n= 2), angiosarcoma (n= 2), liposarcoma (n= 1), and ameloblastic fibrosarcoma (n= 1). Surgical resection was performed in 29 cases. Local recurrence was found in 10 patients and metastasis in 11 patients. Metastases included five regional lymph node metastases and eight distant metastases. The survival of patients with local recurrence or metastasis was poor. Surgery is the most reliable treatment for sarcomas of the oral and maxillofacial region. Adequate excision with safety surgical margin as the initial therapy is important for better survival. The value of radiation therapy and/or chemotherapy is uncertain. The 5-year survival rate of primary cases was 61%.
The effect of trichostatin A (TSA), histone deacetylase inhibitor, on cell growth and the mechanism of growth modulation was examined in 8 gastric and 3 oral carcinoma cell lines which included 9-cis-retinoic acid resistant (MKN-7 and Ho-1-N-1) and IFN- resistant cell lines (MKN-7, -28 and -45). TSA inhibited growth in all cell lines examined. Apoptotic cell death was confirmed by apoptotic ladder formation and induction of a cleaved form (85 kDa) of poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) induction. TSA enhanced the protein expression of p21 WAF1 , CREB-binding protein, cyclinE, cyclin A, Bak and Bax, while it reduced the expression of E2F-1, E2F-4, HDAC1, p53 and hyperphosphorylated form of Rb. Furthermore, TSA induced morphological changes, such as elongation of cytoplasm and cell-to-cell detachment, in gastric and oral carcinoma cell lines. These results suggest that TSA may inhibit cell growth and induce apoptosis of gastric and oral carcinoma cells through modulation of the expression of cell cycle regulators and apoptosis-regulating proteins.
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