Surgery: Current Research

ISSN - 2161-1076

Discovery of salivary biomarkers for detecting oral squamous cell carcinoma by systemic approaches

4th International Conference & Exhibition on Surgery

October 05-07, 2015 Dubai, UAE

Kai-Ping Chang

Chang Gung Memorial Hospital & Chang Gung University, Taiwan

Scientific Tracks Abstracts: Surgery Curr Res

Abstract :

In Taiwan, oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC), representing 90% of oral cavity cancers, is rated as the sixth highest cause of cancer deaths in Taiwan, and accounts for 3% of all newly diagnosed cancer cases in which 27% of male OSCC are between 30-50 years old (the 2009 Cancer Registry of Department of Health of Taiwan). The overall 5-year survival rate and morbidity for patients with OSCC has not been improved over the past two decades due to lacking suitable markers for early detection. The incidence of oral cancer continuously increases and the social and economic impacts on the affected populations are huge. In the past few years, head and neck research group collaborated by Chang Gung Memorial Hospital and Chang Gung University has used various basic research platforms including the genomic approach and proteomic approach attempting to search and identify the novel biomarkers and discussing their related mechanisms and pathogenesis for oral cavity squamous cell carcinoma. In this presentation, I�??ll share our experience to apply the two basic research platforms, including a multiplexed bead-based platform to simultaneously detect auto-antibodies and comparative secretome profiling for primary cell cultures derived from OSCC and adjacent noncancerous epithelium, to discover the potential salivary marker for the detection of OSCC. In these works, we have already demonstrated that THBS2 and a combined panel of salivary auto-antibodies could be effectively useful for OSCC detection.

Biography :

Kai-Ping Chang has completed his ENT residency at Linko Medical Center of Chang Gung Memorial Hospital and PhD degree of Clinical Medical Sciences from Chang Gung University. He has been a visiting scholar at Head & Neck Surgery of MD Anderson Cancer Center at Houston, USA. He is now currently the director and professor of Head & Neck Surgery of ENT department of Chang Gung Memorial Hospital. He has published more than 110 papers in the peer-reviewed journals and has been serving as an editorial board member of several reputed journals.

Email: dr.kpchang@gmail.com

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