KUMJ | VOL. 17 | NO. 4 | ISSUE 68 | OCT.-DEC. 2019
Clinicopathological Analysis of Oral Lesions - A hospital based retrospective study
Poudel P, Upadhyaya C, Humagain M, Srii R, Chaurasia N, Dulal S
Abstract: Background
Proper diagnosis plays a key role that determines treatment and prognosis of the
disease. To give appropriate clinical diagnosis, clinicians must be well aware of the
presentation and demographic information of the lesion including the rare ones.
Histopathology is still considered as gold standard in diagnostic pathology but final
diagnosis becomes difficult unless detailed clinical and radiological descriptions are
given. Hence an interdisciplinary approach is needed which requires correlation
between both clinical and pathological details.
Objective
To analyze the clinicopathological details of all the oral lesions diagnosed in Dhulikhel
hospital within the period of two years and to assess the concordance between
clinical and histopathological diagnosis of these lesions.
Method
Laboratory record file of all the oral lesions diagnosed between January 2016 to
December 2017 were retrieved from the department archives and the data were
collected. The extracted data were analyzed using SPSS version 23.0.
Result
A total of 237 cases were analysed in the present study. Odontogenic cysts were
the most common category followed by benign lesions. However considering the
individual lesion, mucocele was the commonest lesion followed by squamous cell
carcinoma. Total concordance between clinical and histopathologic diagnosis was
found in 56.5% cases. The most clinicopathological agreement was seen for benign
lesions followed by malignant lesions.
Conclusion
Mucocele and oral squamous cell carcinoma are the two most common lesions found
among the patients visiting our hospital. The cases of oral squamous cell carcinoma
are on a rise with each subsequent year. At present, though it is the second most
common entity, it can be hypothesized that it may be higher up on the list. Therefore,
oral healthcare awareness is paramount and this may be one of the best ways to
reduce the oral cancer incidence rates and lowering the healthcare management
burden.
Keyword : Agreement, Concordance, Diagnosis, Prevalence, Oral lesions