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Clinicopathological study of lip cancer: a retrospective hospital‐based study in Taiwan
18
Citations
33
References
2017
Year
Lipid AnalysisEpidemiologyCancer RiskCancer EpidemiologyLip CancerMedicineEpidemiology Of CancerPathologyDermatologyClinicopathological StudyLower Lip CancerOncologyLower LipCancer Risk FactorsPublic HealthCancer ResearchOral Cancer
To evaluate the clinicopathological characteristics, high-risk lifestyle factors (HRLF: chronic exposure to sun, betel quid, alcohol, and tobacco), and prognostic factors of lip cancer. The hospital records of patients with pathologically confirmed lip squamous cell carcinoma (LSCC, n = 112) and lip basal cell carcinoma (LBCC, n = 21) were reviewed. Differences in clinicopathological characteristics between LSCC and LBCC, upper and lower lip, and status of second primary tumors were compared by chi-square test and logistic regression. The prognostic factors for LSCC were analyzed by Cox regression. Compared with LBCC patients, LSCC patients were men-predominant (p < 0.001), had younger ages at onset (p < 0.001), and higher rates of lower lips involvement (p < 0.001) and HRLFs. Patients with second primary tumors were highly associated with lower lip cancer involvement (adjusted odds ratio = 2.91, p = 0.03). Patients with lower lip cancer had more HRLFs with an increasing linear trend (p = 0.004). The poorer prognostic factors of LSCC for disease-specific survival were advanced stage III/IV [crude hazard ratio (CHR) = 11.16, p < 0.001], tumor dimension >4 cm (CHR = 8.19, p = 0.006), lymph node involvement (CHR = 11.48, p < 0.001), and recurrence (CHR = 3.96, p = 0.01); whereas for disease-free survival were moderately to poorly differentiated LSCC (CHR = 4.97, p = 0.002) and alcohol consumption (CHR = 3.13, p = 0.04). LSCC and lower lip cancer were highly associated with HRLFs.
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