Va. Papadimitrakopoulou et al., MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOMARKERS FOR FIELD CANCERIZATION AND MULTISTEP PROCESS IN HEAD AND NECK TUMORIGENESIS, Cancer metastasis reviews, 15(1), 1996, pp. 53-76
One way to explain the development of head and neck cancer is through
the theories of field cancerization, i.e., the exposure of an entire f
ield of tissue to repeated carcinogenic insult, and multistep process,
i.e., development of multiple cancers in a predisposed field through
a series of recognizable stages. Recent molecular genetic studies of h
istologically normal and premalignant epithelia of high-risk subjects
and studies of malignant tumors in aerodigestive tract epithelia have
identified a continuum of accumulated specific genetic alterations tha
t possibly occur during the clonal evolution of tumors, namely, during
the multistep process. Second primary or multiple primary tumors aris
e in the same fields as independent clones, with similar but unique mo
lecular genetic and/or cellular alterations. Consequently, the assessm
ent of these genetic and phenotypic alterations has been integrated in
to clinical chemoprevention trials in an effort to identify biomarkers
that are also risk predictors and intermediate end points. This revie
w covers candidate biomarkers of the processes of field cancerization
and multistep tumor development in aerodigestive tract epithelia, incl
uding general and specific genetic markers, proliferation markers, and
squamous differentiation markers.