The aim of this study was to establish the expression and localisation of E-cadherin and β-catenin in oral squamous cell carcinomas (SCC) so that we could correlate the findings with prognostically-relevant clinicopathological variables. E-cadherin and β-catenin expression in normal oral mucosa and in oral squamous cell carcinomas were examined immunohistochemically, and their association with clinicopathological factors and prognosis were then analysed in 69 patients who had been operated on for oral SCC. E-cadherin expression was found in all 69 cases: in 11 cases (16%) it was weak; in 21 (30%) moderate, and in 37 (54%) high. β-Catenin expression was found in 64 cases (93%): in 18 cases (26%) cell-membrane expression was weak; in 26 (38%) it was moderate; in 19 (28%) it was high, and in one case (1%) there was cytoplasmic staining. No nuclear staining was detected. E-cadherin was significantly associated with histological grade (p=0.002) and alcohol consumption (p=0.05), and β-catenin was significantly associated with nodal stage (p=0.02), TNM stage (p=0.009), and E-cadherin expression (p=0.01). However, none of them were independent prognostic factors in the disease-specific survival analysis. E-cadherin is closely linked to β-catenin expression in oral SCC and to tumour differentiation. Alcohol consumption could increase the aggressiveness of SCC, leading to reduced expression of E-cadherin. β-catenin could be an early marker for the identification of occult metastases in patients with oral SCC.
Copyright © 2012 The British Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.