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Lack of association between denture trauma and loss of heterozygosity confronts the proposed pathologic role of chronic mucosal trauma in oral carcinogenesis.

Vanessa de Fátima BernardesMarina Gonçalves DinizJéssica Carolina SilvaDébora Chaves MoraesLuiz De MarcoCarolina Cavaliéri GomesHélder Antônio Rebelo Pontes
Published in: Journal of oral pathology & medicine : official publication of the International Association of Oral Pathologists and the American Academy of Oral Pathology (2019)
Chronic mucosal trauma is suggested as an additional etiologic risk factor for oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC), but there is a lack of experimental-molecular data. If chronic trauma of the oral mucosa is carcinogenic, it should be associated with early genetic alterations seen during typical progression of OSCC, like loss of heterozygosity (LOH). We investigated LOH in the key chromosomal arms 3p, 9p and 17p in inflammatory fibrous hyperplasia associated with removable dental prosthesis and also in normal oral mucosa, by using the polymorphic microsatellite markers D3S1300 at 3p14.2, D9S1748 at 9p21, D17S1289 at 17p12 and D17S974 at 17p13 and capillary electrophoresis. LOH was detected in 2/15 (13%) fibrous hyperplasia samples similarly to other reactive and inflammatory lesions. None of the normal mucosa samples presented LOH. Our experimental-molecular results do not support the hypothesis that trauma associated with dental prosthesis has an important role in oral carcinogenesis.
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