Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery
Volume 55, Issue 5 , Pages 470-477, May 1997

A comparison of segmental and marginal bony resection for oral squamous cell carcinoma involving the mandible

  • Robert A Ord, MD, DDS, FACS (Associate Professor)

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress correspondence and reprint requests to Dr Ord: Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, University of Maryland at Baltimore, 666 W Baltimore St, Baltimore, MD 21201-1586.
    • Oral-Maxillofacial Surgery, University of Maryland USA
    • Oncology Program, University of Maryland Cancer Center USA
  • ,
  • Majgan Sarmadi (Dental Student)

      Affiliations

    • University of Maryland Dental School USA
  • ,
  • John Papadimitrou, MD (Professor)

      Affiliations

    • Department of Pathology, University of Maryland USA

Abstract 

This study reviews the accuracy of preoperative diagnosis of mandibular invasion by oral squamous cell carcinoma and assesses the role of marginal resection of the mandible in its treatment.

A retrospective study of a 5-year cohort of 46 patients who underwent mandibular resection for previously untreated oral squamous cell carcinoma was done. Data evaluated included age; sex; site and stage of cancer; preoperative clinical, panoramic, and computed tomography (CT) evaluations; and histologic findings on the resection specimen. The type of mandibular resection (segmental vs marginal) and treatment outcome also were compared.

Clinical examination, panoramic radiographs, and CT scans were 78.5% to 82.6% accurate in diagnosing mandibular invasion by squamous carcinoma. Clinical examination and panoramic radiographs are more sensitive than CT scans (86.6% vs 53%), but CT scans were more specific (92.5% vs 80%). The mandible was involved in 65% of patients with segmental resection and 7.6% of patients who had a marginal resection. Nineteen percent of the patients in the marginal resection group died of their oral cancer, two of five patients with local recurrence. Ten percent of patients in the segmental resectiongroup died of oral cancer; no local recurrences were seen.

There is no completely accurate method of diagnosing bony invasion of the mandible by oral squamous cell carcinoma. A combination of clinical examination, plain radiographs, and computed tomography (CT) scans may improve the diagnosis. Marginal resection is best reserved for cancers close to the bone with no invasion, minimal cortical invasion, or with early “arrosive” invasion. It is best in the symphysis region. Careful case selection will allow a favorable oncologic outcome with preservation of the mandibular contour.

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 Received from the University of Maryland at Baltimore.

PII: S0278-2391(97)90693-5

Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery
Volume 55, Issue 5 , Pages 470-477, May 1997