Department of Interdisciplinary Medicine, Section of Dental Medicine, University of Bari "Aldo Moro", 70124 Bari, Italy.
Ionian Department, Microbiology and Virology Lab., Policlinico University Hospital, University of Bari "Aldo Moro", 70124 Bari, Italy.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2020 May 2;17(9):3168. doi: 10.3390/ijerph17093168.
: This historical medical literature review aims at understanding the evolution of the medical existence of oral cancer over times, particularly better comprehending if the apparent lower prevalence of this type of cancer in antiquity is a real value due to the absence of modern environmental and lifestyle factors or it is linked to a misinterpretation of ancient foreign terms found in ancient medical texts regarding oral neoplasms. : The databases MedLne, PubMed, Web of Science, Elsevier's EMBASE.com, Cochrane Review, National Library of Greece (Stavros Niarchos Foundation, Athens) and the Library of the School of Health Sciences of the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens (Greece) were extensively searched for relevant studies published during the past century on the history of oral cancer and its treatment from antiquity to modern times, in addition to the WHO website to analyse the latest epidemiological data. In addition, we included historical books on the topic of interest and original sources. : Historical references reveal that the cradle of the oral oncology was in ancient Egypt, the Asian continent and Greece and cancer management was confined to an approximate surgical practice, in order to remove abnormal masses and avoid bleeding with cauterization. In the Medieval Age, little progress occurred in medicine in general, oral cancers management included. It is only from the Renaissance to modern times that knowledge about its pathophysiological mechanisms and histopathology and its surgical and pharmacological treatment approaches became increasingly deep all over the world, evolving to the actual integrated treatment. Despite the abundant literature exploring oncology in past civilizations, the real prevalence of oral cancer in antiquity is much less known; but a literature analysis cannot exclude a consistent prevalence of this cancer in past populations, probably with a likely lower incidence than today, because many descriptions of its aggressiveness were found in ancient medical texts, but it is still difficult to be sure that each single description of oral masses could be associated to cancer, particularly for what concerns the period before the Middle Ages. : Modern oncologists and oral surgeons must learn a lot from their historic counterparts in order to avoid past unsuccessful efforts to treatment oral malignancies. Several descriptions of oral cancers in the antiquity that we found let us think that this disease might be linked to mechanisms not strictly dependent on environmental risk factors, and this might guide future research on oral cavity treatments towards strategical cellular and molecular techniques.
这篇医学文献综述旨在了解口腔癌在不同时期的医学存在演变,特别是更好地理解古代口腔癌发病率较低是否是由于缺乏现代环境和生活方式因素的真实情况,还是由于古代医学文献中对口腔肿瘤的外国术语存在误解。
我们广泛检索了过去一个世纪以来有关口腔癌历史及其从古至今治疗方法的研究,包括 MedLne、PubMed、Web of Science、Elsevier 的 EMBASE.com、Cochrane Review、希腊国家图书馆(雅典的 Stavros Niarchos 基金会)和雅典国立和 Kapodistrian 大学健康科学学院图书馆(希腊),以及世界卫生组织网站,以分析最新的流行病学数据。此外,我们还包括了与该主题相关的历史书籍和原始资料。
历史文献表明,口腔肿瘤学的发源地在古埃及、亚洲大陆和希腊,癌症的治疗仅限于近似的手术实践,目的是切除异常肿块并通过烧灼止血。在中世纪,医学总体上几乎没有进步,包括口腔癌的治疗。只有从文艺复兴到现代,全世界才逐渐深入了解其病理生理机制和组织病理学,以及手术和药物治疗方法,从而发展到实际的综合治疗。尽管有大量文献探讨过去文明中的肿瘤学,但古代口腔癌的真实流行情况知之甚少;但是,文献分析并不能排除过去人群中这种癌症的一致流行,可能发病率比今天低,因为在古代医学文献中发现了很多关于其侵袭性的描述,但仍然很难确定古代医学文献中对口腔肿块的每一个单一描述都与癌症有关,特别是在中世纪之前的时期。
现代肿瘤学家和口腔外科医生必须从他们的历史前辈那里吸取很多教训,以避免过去治疗口腔恶性肿瘤的失败努力。我们在古代发现的几个口腔癌的描述让我们认为,这种疾病可能与不完全依赖于环境危险因素的机制有关,这可能为未来的口腔治疗研究提供指导,使研究方向转向战略性的细胞和分子技术。