977 resultados para Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma
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During 2003, a total of 258 new patients with oral soft tissue lesions were admitted at the Stomatology Service of the Department of Oral Surgery and Stomatology at the University of Berne. For the present study, 185 patients with clinically and histopathologically verified diagnoses were included. The following data was collected: prevalence of oral mucosal lesions, distribution of benign, precancerous and malign lesions in different age groups, and the concordance of the referral with the working diagnosis at the Stomatology Service. The most frequent pathological soft tissue findings were fibrous hyperplasias (n = 44) and oral lichen planus (n = 30). Precancerous lesions were present in 41 cases (30 patients with oral lichen planus, eleven oral leukoplakias), and ten patients had oral malignomas. Most lesions were found in patients between the age of 40 and 60 years. The referral diagnosis concurred in 36.6% (n = 67) of the cases with the definite diagnosis before initiation of treatment, the working diagnosis in 70% (n = 128) of the cases. Therefore, it can be concluded that a specialised Stomatology Service serves as a center of competence due to large numbers of patients/cases seen and treated, and the resulting high level of clinical experience of the staff. Moreover, it is important in the primary diagnosis of oral squamous cell carcinoma, in collaboration with the referring dentist in private practice.
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Consumption of tobacco can result not only in a multitude of different general health problems like carcinoma of the lung, ischaemic cardiac diseases, peripheral vascular diseases, stroke, chronic-obstructive pulmonary diseases or peptic ulcers, but also in pathologic lesions of the oral mucosa. Benign oral lesions from smoking or consumption of smokeless tobacco are the so-called smoker's palate and smoker's melanosis. On the other hand, tobacco-associated lesions like oral leukoplakia or oral squamous cell carcinoma are already potentially life-threatening diseases that in general require active treatment. The following review article will present and discuss the typical lesions of the oral mucosa that result from chronic tobacco consumption. The aim of this article is to demonstrate dental health care providers the needs and benefits of tobacco use cessation in a dental setting, especially regarding stomatologic sequelae and consequences. The present article is the first in a series of articles from the Swiss task force "Smoking - Intervention in the private dental office" on the topic "tobacco use and dental medicine".
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Stomatologic lesions at risk to develop an oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) such as oral leukoplakia, erythroplakia/erythroleukoplakia, or oral lichen planus, need an early detection, diagnosis and a long-term/lifelong follow-up to prevent malignant transformation. In the following report, two patients are presented with oral mucosal lesions, who were referred, diagnosed, treated, and underwent follow-up examinations at the Stomatology Service of the Department of Oral Surgery and Stomatology at the University of Bern. These two cases emphasize the importance of early detection and managment of precancerous lesions or initial stages of OSCC. Additionally, risk factors, such as tobacco and alcohol consumption and their influence on stomatologic lesions and their prognosis, will be discussed.
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Equine penile papillomas, in situ carcinomas, and invasive carcinomas are hypothesized to belong to a continuum of papillomavirus-induced diseases. The former ones clinically present as small grey papules, while the latter 2 lesions are more hyperplasic or alternatively ulcerated. To test the hypothesis that these lesions are papillomavirus-induced, samples of 24 horses with characteristic clinical and histologic findings of penile papillomas or in situ or invasive squamous cell carcinomas were collected. As controls, 11 horses with various lesions--namely, Balanoposthitis (6 cases), melanoma (3 cases), follicular cyst (1 case), and amyloidosis (1 case)--were included. DNA was extracted and polymerase chain reaction applied to amplify papillomavirus DNA. The respective primers were designed to amplify DNA of the recently discovered equine papillomavirus EcPV2. All tested papilloma and squamous cell carcinoma samples were found to contain DNA of either of 2 previously published EcPV2 variants. Among the other samples 6 of 11 were found to contain EcPV2 DNA. To further support the findings and to determine where the papillomavirus DNA was located within the lesions, an in situ hybridization for the detection of EcPV2 DNA was established. The samples tested by this technique were found to clearly contain papillomavirus nucleic acid concentrated in the nucleus of the koilocytes. The findings of this study support previous data and the hypothesis that papillomaviruses induce the described penile lesions in horses.
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Toothpastes contain three main components: detergents, abrasives, and fluoride. Detergents, particularly sodium lauryl sulfate, have been proposed as components that enable toothpastes to produce cytotoxic effects in vitro. However, not all toothpastes contain sodium lauryl sulfate, and almost no studies have found an association between detergents and the in vitro cytotoxicity of toothpastes. The present study examined the in vitro cytotoxicity of nine commercially available toothpastes containing four different detergents. Toothpastes were diluted in serum-free medium, centrifuged, and filter sterilized. The half-lethal concentration of the toothpaste-conditioned medium (TCM) was calculated based on the formation of formazan by gingival fibroblasts, oral squamous cell carcinoma HSC-2 cells, and L929 cells. Cell proliferation was analyzed, and live-dead staining was performed, after exposure of cells to conditioned medium prepared with 1% toothpaste (1% TCM). It was found that toothpastes containing sodium lauryl sulfate and amine fluoride strongly inhibited cell viability with the half-lethal concentration being obtained with conditioned medium prepared with approximately 1% toothpaste (1% TCM). Toothpastes containing cocamidopropyl betaine and Steareth-20 showed higher half-lethal concentration values, with the half-lethal concentration being obtained with conditioned medium prepared with 10% (10% TCM) and 70% (70% TCM) toothpaste, respectively. Proliferation and live-dead data were consistent with the cell-viability analyses. These results demonstrate that the type of detergent in toothpastes can be associated with changes in in vitro cell toxicity.
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Non-melanoma skin cancers, including basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), are the most common neoplasms in the United States with a lifetime risk nearly equal to all other types of cancer combined. Retinoids are naturally occurring and synthetic analogues of vitamin A that bind to nuclear retinoid receptors and modulate gene expression as a means of regulating cell proliferation and differentiation. Retinoids have been employed for many years in the treatment of various cutaneous lesions and for cancer chemoprevention and therapy. The primary drawback limiting the use of retinoids is their toxicity, which is also associated with receptor-gene interactions. In this study, the effects of the synthetic retinoids N-(4-hydroxyphenyl)retinamide (4HPR) and 6-[3-(1-adamantyl)-4-hydroxyphenyl]-2-naphthalene carboxylic acid (CD437) were examined in cutaneous keratinocytes. Four human cutaneous SCC cell lines were examined along with normal human epidermal keratinocyte (NHEK) cells from two donors. Sensitivity to 4HPR or CD437 alone or in combination with other agents was determined via growth inhibition, cell cycle distributions, or apoptosis induction. Both synthetic retinoids were able to promote apoptosis in SCC cells more effectively than the natural retinoid all-trans retinoic acid. Apoptosis could not be inhibited by nuclear retinoic acid receptor antagonists. In NHEK cells, 4HPR induced apoptosis while CD437 promoted G1 arrest. 4HPR acted as a prooxidant by generating reactive oxygen species (ROS) in SCC and NHEK cells. 4HPR-induced apoptosis in SCC cells could be inhibited or potentiated by manipulating cellular defenses against oxidative stress, indicating an essential role for ROS in 4HPR-induced apoptosis. CD437 promoted apoptosis in SCC cells in S and G2/M phases of the cell cycle within two hours of treatment, and this rapid induction could not be blocked with cycloheximide. This study shows: (1) 4HPR- and CD437-induced apoptosis do not directly involve a traditional retinoid pathway; (2) 4HPR can act as a prooxidant as a means of promoting apoptosis; (3) CD437 induces apoptosis in SCC cells independent of protein synthesis and is potentially less toxic to NHEK cells; and (4) 4HPR and CD437 operate under different mechanisms with respect to apoptosis induction and this may potentially enhance their therapeutic index in vivo. ^
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Oral squamous cell carcinomas are characterized by complex, often near-triploid karyotypes with structural and numerical variations superimposed on the initial clonal chromosomal alterations. We used immunohistochemistry combined with classical cytogenetic analysis and spectral karyotyping to investigate the chromosomal segregation defects in cultured oral squamous cell carcinoma cells. During division, these cells frequently exhibit lagging chromosomes at both metaphase and anaphase, suggesting defects in the mitotic apparatus or kinetochore. Dicentric anaphase chromatin bridges and structurally altered chromosomes with consistent long arms and variable short arms, as well as the presence of gene amplification, suggested the occurrence of breakage–fusion–bridge cycles. Some anaphase bridges were observed to persist into telophase, resulting in chromosomal exclusion from the reforming nucleus and micronucleus formation. Multipolar spindles were found to various degrees in the oral squamous cell carcinoma lines. In the multipolar spindles, the poles demonstrated different levels of chromosomal capture and alignment, indicating functional differences between the poles. Some spindle poles showed premature splitting of centrosomal material, a precursor to full separation of the microtubule organizing centers. These results indicate that some of the chromosomal instability observed within these cancer cells might be the result of cytoskeletal defects and breakage–fusion–bridge cycles.
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O carcinoma epidermóide bucal (CEC) é uma neoplasia maligna com alta morbidade e mortalidade e de difícil tratamento. O tratamento convencional para o CEC inclui cirurgia e radioterapia, seguida ou não de quimioterapia. Apesar de serem amplamente difundidos, esses tratamentos podem ser ineficazes para alguns CECs resistentes. A terapia fotodinâmica (PDT) oncológica tem sido utilizada para o tratamento adjuvante do CEC bucal, principalmente nos casos menos invasivos e que necessitam de redução do tumor para a ressecção cirúrgica. Contudo, semelhantemente aos tratamentos convencionais, a PDT pode também induzir o aparecimento de populações celulares resistentes, fato já descrito para carcinoma cutâneo, adenocarcinoma de cólon e adenocarcinoma mamário. A hipótese de que células de CEC bucal possam desenvolver resistência à PDT ainda não foi testada. Portanto, o objetivo deste trabalho foi verificar se células de CEC bucal (SCC9) desenvolvem resistência a ciclos repetidos de PDT mediada pelo ácido 5- aminolevulínico (5-ALA-PDT) e avaliar se nesse processo ocorre modificação da expressão de marcadores relacionados a sobrevivência celular (NF?B, Bcl-2, iNOS, mTOR e Akt). Foi utilizada linhagem de células de CEC bucal (SCC9), submetida às seguintes condições: 1) Controle - células cultivadas sem nenhum tratamento; 2) ALA - células incubadas com 5-ALA (1mM durante 4 horas); 3) LED - tratadas com iluminação LED (630nm, 5,86J/cm2, 22,5J, 150mW, 150s); 4) PDT - tratadas com 5- ALA-PDT, com os protocolos do grupo ALA e LED combinados, gerando dose letal de 90%. Inicialmente foi realizado somente um ciclo de PDT, sendo avaliada a viabilidade celular em todos os grupos após 24, 48, 72 e 120h da irradiação. Também foi realizado ensaio de detecção da fragmentação de DNA (TUNEL) e análise por imunofluorescência da expressão das proteínas NF?B, Bcl-2, iNOS, pmTOR e pAkt nas células viáveis. Como resultado desse primeiro tratamento com 5-ALA-PDT, observou-se que as células sobreviventes ao tratamento apresentaram intensa marcação para pmTOR e exibiram potencial de crescimento durante o período analisado. Após esses ensaios, as células que sobreviveram a essa primeira sessão foram coletadas, replaqueadas e novamente cultivadas, sendo então submetidas a novo ciclo de 5-ALA-PDT. Esse processo foi realizado 5 vezes, variando-se a intensidade de irradiação à medida que se observava aumento na viabilidade celular. As populações celulares que exibiram viabilidade 1,5 vezes maior do que a detectada no primeiro ciclo PDT foram consideradas resistentes ao tratamento. Os mesmos marcadores analisados no primeiro ciclo de PDT foram novamente avaliados nas populações resistentes. Foram obtidas quatro populações celulares resistentes, com viabilidade de até 4,6 vezes maior do que a do primeiro ciclo de PDT e irradiação com LED que variou de 5,86 a 9,38J/cm2. A população mais resistente apresentou ainda menor intensidade de protoporfirina IX, maior capacidade de migração e modificação na morfologia nuclear. As populações resistentes testadas exibiram aumento na expressão de pNF?B, iNOS, pmTOR e pAkt, mas não da proteína anti-apoptótica Bcl- 2. Ensaio in vivo foi também conduzido em ratos, nos quais CEC bucal foi quimicamente induzido e tratado ou não com 5-ALA-PDT. Houve intensa expressão imuno-histoquímica das proteínas pNF?B, Bcl-2, iNOS, pmTOR e pAkt em relação ao controle não tratado, nas células adjacentes à área de necrose provocada pela PDT. Concluiu-se que as células de CEC bucal tratadas com 5-ALA-PDT a uma dose de 90% de letalidade desenvolveram viabilidade crescente após ciclos repetidos do tratamento, bem como exibiram superexpressão de proteínas relacionadas à sobrevivência celular, tanto in vitro quanto in vivo. Esses fatos, aliados à maior capacidade de migração, sugerem a aquisição de fenótipo de resistência à 5-ALAPDT. Esse aspecto deve ser cuidadosamente considerado no momento da instituição dessa terapia para os CECs bucais.
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Skin cancers pose a significant public health problem in high-risk populations. We have prospectively monitored basal cell carcinoma (BCC) and squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) incidence in a Queensland community over a 10-y period by recording newly treated lesions, supplemented by skin examination surveys. Age-standardized incidence rates of people with new histologically confirmed BCC were 2787 per 100,000 person-years at risk (pyar) among men and 1567 per 100,000 pyar among women, and corresponding tumor rates were 5821 per 100,000 pyar and 2733 per 100,000 pyar, respectively. Incidence rates for men with new SCC were 944 per 100,000 pyar and for women 675 per 100,000 pyar; tumor rates were 1754 per 100,000 pyar and 846 per 100,000 pyar, respectively. Incidence rates of BCC tumors but not SCC tumors varied noticeably according to method of surveillance, with BCC incidence rates based on skin examination surveys around three times higher than background treatment rates. This was mostly due to an increase in diagnosis of new BCC on sites other than the head and neck, arms, and hands associated with skin examination surveys and little to do with advancing the time of diagnosis of BCC on these sites as seen by a return to background rates following the examination surveys. We conclude that BCC that might otherwise go unreported are detected during skin examination surveys and thus that such skin cancer screening can influence the apparent burden of skin cancer.
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Il carcinoma squamocellulare è il tumore maligno orale più frequente nel gatto e si caratterizza per diagnosi spesso tardiva e prognosi infausta. Il progetto riguarda la ricerca di marker di rilevanza dia-gnostica nel carcinoma squamocellulare orale felino (FOSCC), al fine di sviluppare un test di scree-ning non invasivo. È stata condotta un’analisi retrospettiva delle disregolazioni del gene oncosoppres-sore TP53 in campioni istologici di FOSCC e di una popolazione di controllo (lesioni infiammatorie croniche orali e mucose orali normali feline). Tramite next-generation sequencing (NGS) sono state rilevate mutazioni di TP53 nel 69% dei FOSCC, ed anche l’espressione immunoistochimica della pro-teina p53 era presente nel 69% dei tumori, con una concordanza discreta (77%) fra le due alterazioni. Nella popolazione di controllo erano presenti disregolazioni di p53 solo in due lesioni infiammatorie (3%). Successivamente è stata effettuata un’analisi prospettica con NGS della metilazione del DNA di 17 geni, noti per essere disregolati nel carcinoma squamocellulare orale umano o felino, insieme all’analisi mutazionale di TP53, in campioni istologici di FOSCC e in un gruppo di controllo. Le stesse indagini molecolari sono state svolte in parallelo su campioni di cellule prelevate mediante brushing orale. Utilizzando 6 dei geni indagati differenzialmente metilati nei FOSCC (FLI1, MiR124-1, KIF1A, MAGEC2, ZAP70, MiR363) e lo stato mutazionale diTP53, è stato impostato un algoritmo diagnostico per differenziare i FOSCC dalla mucosa orale non neoplastica. Applicato ai brushing, l’algoritmo è risultato positivo (indicativo di carcinoma) in 24/35 (69%) gatti con FOSCC, contro 2/60 (3%) controlli (sensibilità: 69%; specifici-tà: 97%). La quota di FOSCC identificati era significativamente maggiore nei gatti sottoposti a prelievo in anestesia generale rispetto ai gatti svegli. Questi risultati sono incoraggianti per il riconoscimento precoce del FOSCC tramite brushing orale. Saranno necessari ulteriori studi su casistiche più ampie per validare questa metodica e migliorarne la sensibilità.
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Background: Galectin-3 is a lectin that presents pivotal roles in tumor biology and there are no studies evaluating their expression in dysplasias and carcinomas developed from tongue carcinogenesis models. Aims: To investigate the role of galectin-3 in the development of tongue carcinomas using a mouse model of oral carcinogenesis. Methods: Galectin-3-deficient (gal3(-/-)) and wild-type (gal3(+/+)) mice were challenged with 4-nitroquinoline-1-oxide in drinking water for 16 weeks and killed at different times. Tongues were removed and the number of dysplasias and carcinomas was counted. An immunohistochemical study for galectin-3 was performed only in the tongue from gal3(+/+) mice. Results: In both groups, a reduction of dysplasias and an increase of carcinomas from week 16 to week 32 (p > 0.05) were observed. A predominance of high cytoplasmic and nuclear galectin-3 expression was observed in carcinomas (64.7%) and dysplasias (55.5%), respectively (p > 0.05). The perilesional areas always presented a statistical cytoplasmic and nuclear galectin-3 overexpression. Conclusions: Absence of galectin-3 did not directly affect the process of carcinogenesis and a cytoplasm shift of galectin-3 seems to be associated with development of tongue carcinomas. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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Acetaldehyde is a carcinogenic product of alcohol fermentation and metabolism in microbes associated with cancers of the upper digestive tract. In yeast acetaldehyde is a by-product of the pyruvate bypass that converts pyruvate into acetyl-Coenzyme A (CoA) during fermentation. The aims of our study were: (i) to determine the levels of acetaldehyde produced by Candida albicans in the presence of glucose in low oxygen tension in vitro; (ii) to analyse the expression levels of genes involved in the pyruvate-bypass and acetaldehyde production; and (iii) to analyse whether any correlations exist between acetaldehyde levels, alcohol dehydrogenase enzyme activity or expression of the genes involved in the pyruvate-bypass. Candida albicans strains were isolated from patients with oral squamous cell carcinoma (n = 5), autoimmune polyendocrinopathy-candidiasis-ectodermal dystrophy (APECED) patients with chronic oral candidosis (n = 5), and control patients (n = 5). The acetaldehyde and ethanol production by these isolates grown under low oxygen tension in the presence of glucose was determined, and the expression of alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH1 and ADH2), pyruvate decarboxylase (PDC11), aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALD6) and acetyl-CoA synthetase (ACS1 and ACS2) and Adh enzyme activity were analysed. The C. albicans isolates produced high levels of acetaldehyde from glucose under low oxygen tension. The acetaldehyde levels did not correlate with the expression of ADH1, ADH2 or PDC11 but correlated with the expression of down-stream genes ALD6 and ACS1. Significant differences in the gene expressions were measured between strains isolated from different patient groups. Under low oxygen tension ALD6 and ACS1, instead of ADH1 or ADH2, appear the most reliable indicators of candidal acetaldehyde production from glucose.
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The actin cytoskeleton is a dynamic structure that determines cell shape. Actin turnover is mandatory for migration in normal and malignant cells. In epithelial cancers invasion is frequently accompanied by epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT). In EMT, cancer cells acquire a migratory phenotype through transcriptional reprogramming. EMT requires substantial re-organization of actin. During the past decade, new actin regulating proteins have been discovered. Among these are members of the formin family. To study formin expression in tissues and cells, antibodies for detection of formin proteins FMNL1 (Formin-like protein 1), FMNL2 (Formin-like protein 2) and FHOD1 (Formin homology 2 domain containing protein 1) were used. The expression of formins was characterized in normal tissues and selected cancers using immunohistochemistry. The functional roles of formins were studied in cancer cell lines. We found that FMNL2 is widely expressed. It is a filopodial component in cultured melanoma cells. In clinical melanoma, FMNL2 expression has prognostic significance. FHOD1 is a formin expressed in mesenchymal cell types. FHOD1 expression is increased in oral squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) EMT. Importantly, FHOD1 participates in invasion of cultured oral SCC cells. FMNL1 expression is low in normal epithelia, but high in leukocytes and smooth muscle cells. Expression of FMNL1 can be found in carcinoma; we detected FMNL1 expressing cells in basal type of breast cancer. Our results indicate that formins are differentially expressed in normal tissues and that their expression may shift in cancer. Functionally FMNL2 and FHOD1 participate in processes related to cancer progression. Studying formins is increasingly important since they are potential drug targets.
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The Oral Epithelial Dysplasia (OED) is the lesion that precedes or co-exists with the Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma (OSCC), presenting molecular and/or histological similar alterations. The divergences about the malignization potential of OEDs and the role of inflammation in this process make hard the early diagnosis and evaluation of OSCCs aggressiveness. Thus, it became the goal of this study to evaluate the role of inflammation in oral carcinogenesis and tumoral aggressiveness. For this purpose a morphological study was performed in 20 OED cases and 40 OSCC cases to detect the malignization potential of OEDs and the histologic malignancy grading (HMG) of OSCCs, analyzing superficial masses for dismorphism evaluation and the invasive front for evaluation of tumoral growing; and immunohistochemical, using anti-CD8, anti-FOXP3, anti-TGFβ, anti-TNFα and anti-NF-кB antibodies, comparing their with the types lesion, histological degree and intensity of the inflammatory infiltrate. The results were statistically significant for the parameters: cell maturity (p=0,0001), masses presence (p=0,038) and dismorphism (p=0,037), when associated to HMG. To compare the expression of the markers with the types lesion, a significantly higher expression of CD8 (p=0,001) and NF-кB (p=0,002) in the OED, and also a smaller expression of the epithelial TGFβ in the severe OEDs (p=0,011), without significant expression between OSCC degrees. By relating the expression of the studied markers with the inflammatory infiltrate intensity, a positive relation was observed with: inflammatory TNFα(p=0,003), epithelial TNFα and NF-кB (p=0,051 and p=0,004), in OEDs; and with CD8 (p=0,021) and TNFα (p=0,015) in conjunctive OSCCs; and a negative relation with epithelial TNFα (p=0,034) in OSCCs. No significant relation was found between FOXP3 with any of the studied variables. These findings lead to the conclusion that, the study of the invasive front is as important as the study of superficial masses for the evaluation of tumoral aggressiveness; the intensity of the inflammatory infiltrate has no use as a parameter for prognostic evaluation of OSCC in routine exams, but, the molecular events detected in this study may be necessary to give basis for determining the malignant potential in OEDs and aggressiveness in OSCCs
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Oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) is an important cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide despite recent advances in treatment. There are several studies aiming to find markers that may improve the assessment of this disease prognosis. Studies about genetic polymorphisms have gained prominence due to their influence on individual susceptibility to cancer development. The aim of this study was to evaluate the association between the frequency of polymorphisms XPD Lys751Gln and XRCC3 Thr241Met and clinicopathological features of OSCC cases, including age, sex, presence or absence of metastases, and histological grading of malignancy according to Bryne (1998). Sample consisted of 54 cases of OSCC and 40 cases of inflammatory fibrous hyperplasia (IFH). OSCC cases were classified as low or high grade. DNA samples were previously extracted from paraffin blocks. Genotypes for each case were determined through PCR-RFLP (polymerase chain reaction - restriction fragment length polymorphism). Results were analyzed by Fisher s exact test and Chi-square test and the odds ratio was calculated considering p < 0.05 to indicate statistical significance. For XPD, Lys/Gln genotype was more common in IFHs (n=28; 70%) than in OSCCs (n=24; 44.4%) (OR: 0.3; p<0.05). Frequency of Gln allele was higher in high-grade lesions when compared to low grade lesions (0.48 and 0.21, respectively) (OR: 3.4; p<0.05). For XRCC3, Met allele was more common in OSCC than in IFH (0.49 and 0.35, respectively) (OR: 2.6; p<0.05). Met/Met genotype was associated with presence of metastases (OR: 8.1; p<0.05). There was no statistically significant association between the genotypes and the age or sex of patients. In the present sample, the higher frequency of XPD Gln allele in IFH reveals a possible protective role of this variant against the development of OSCC. However, its association with high-grade lesions indicates that this allele could influence the tumor progression after the neoplasia development. The presence of XRCC3 Met allele, in turn, seems to contribute to the development of OSCC and metastases