Diagnostics (Dec 2022)

Association of High Immunohistochemical Expression of Minichromosome Maintenance 3 with Human Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma—A Preliminary Study

  • Rabia Zahir,
  • Zafar Ali Khan,
  • Benish Aleem,
  • Shahzad Ahmad,
  • Asif Ali,
  • Rakhi Issrani,
  • Mohammed Katib Alruwaili,
  • Shazia Iqbal,
  • Shmoukh Fahad Alghumaiz,
  • Sarah Hatab Alanazi,
  • Muhammad Farooq Umer,
  • Ihsan Ullah,
  • Sumera,
  • Kiran Kumar Ganji

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics13010061
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
p. 61

Abstract

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Background: Oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) may arise from premalignant oral lesions (PMOL) in most cases. Minichromosome maintenance 3 (MCM3) is a proliferative marker that has been investigated as a potential diagnostic biomarker in the diagnosis of oral cancer. Objectives: To evaluate the association of MCM3 expression, its clinicopathologic parameters and to identify snuff (also called naswar) as a potential risk factor for changes in MCM3 expression in PMOL and OSCC. Methodology: Immunohistochemistry (IHC) of MCM3 was performed on 32 PMOL, 32 OSCC and 16 normal controls after optimization of IHC methodology. Histoscore (0–300) was used as a scoring system and seven different cut-offs were identified for analyses. Data were analyzed using various statistical tests. Results: Among the seven cutoffs, 40% strong positive cells were found to be a better cut-off as they were associated with many pathological variables (Broder’s grade, Aneroth’s grade, and mitotic activity). The differential MCM3 expression in oral lesions (PMOL and OSCC) was statistically significant (p = 0.03). Moreover, MCM3 expression is raised with increased duration and frequency of snuff use. Conclusion: High MCM3 expression is associated with disease progression and is a potential indicator of malignant transformations from PMOL to OSCC. Moreover, the use of snuff is associated with MCM3 over-expression.

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