Abstract
The survival of patients with a head-and-neck squamous cell carcinoma is determined by loco-regional recurrence and second primary carcinomas. As a complement to histopathology, molecular changes of tumour marginal and tumour distant tissue may confirm curative surgical tumour extirpation. We tested telomerase activity with PCR-ELISA kits. 20 tumour margin biopsies were chosen by the surgeon from 20 patients. In addition, 3 tissue samples were taken from each of 20 additional patients, one from the carcinoma centre, the tumour margin and one distant from the tumour. 50% of the carcinoma centres were telomerase-positive. Thirteen of the 40 tumour margin samples showed increased telomerase levels, and in 3 of these residual carcinoma was histopathologically detected. Six of the 20 tumour distant tissues revealed increased telomerase levels. Telomerase positivity in carcinoma-free tumour margins correlated with a good prognosis. Confirmation of the results in a larger patient group is needed.
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Fabricius, E. M., Gurr, U., & Wildner, G. P. (2002). Telomerase activity levels in the surgical margin and tumour distant tissue of the squamous cell carcinoma of the head-and-neck. Analytical Cellular Pathology, 24(1), 25–39. https://doi.org/10.1155/2002/452527
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