Gingival Squamous Cell Carcinoma Predicted to Originate From the Gingival Sulcular Epithelium in a Young Female: A Report of a Rare Case

  • Kikuta S
  • Teratani Y
  • Matsuo K
  • et al.
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Abstract

Oral cancer is a disease primarily in older adults and extremely rare in young adults. Risk factors for oral cancer are irritants such as tobacco smoke and alcohol and chronic mechanical irritants but mechanisms involved in carcinogenesis in young adults are unclear because of less exposure to their risk factors. Herein, we report a rare case of gingival squamous cell carcinoma in a 19-year-old female patient, in whom the tumor predictably originated in the gingival sulcular epithelium. Histopathological examination of the resected tissue showed a cancer cell nest invading from the gingival sulcular epithelium without a breakdown of the basement membrane of the marginal gingival epithelium. Six years after the surgery, no recurrence or metastasis has been detected.

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Kikuta, S., Teratani, Y., Matsuo, K., & Kusukawa, J. (2023). Gingival Squamous Cell Carcinoma Predicted to Originate From the Gingival Sulcular Epithelium in a Young Female: A Report of a Rare Case. Cureus. https://doi.org/10.7759/cureus.37046

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