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EDNRB and DCC salivary rinse hypermethylation has a similar performance as expert clinical examination in discrimination of oral cancer/dysplasia vs. benign lesions

Schussel, Juliana L; Zhou, Xian C; Zhang, Zhe; Pattani, Kavita M; Bermudez, Francisco; Jean-Charles, Germain; McCaffrey, Thomas V; Padhya, Tapan; Phelan, Joan; Spivakovsky, Silvia; Brait, Mariana; Li, Ryan J; Bowne, Helen Y; Goldberg, Judith D; Rolnitzky, Linda; Robbins, Miriam; Kerr, A Ross; Sirois, David; Califano, Joseph A
PURPOSE: Promoter hypermethylation has been recently proposed as mean for HNSCC detection in salivary rinses. In a prospective study of high-risk population, we showed that EDNRB promoter methylation in salivary rinses is a useful biomarker for oral cancer and premalignancy. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Using that cohort, we evaluated EDNRB methylation status and 8 additional genes. Clinical risk assessment by expert clinicians was performed and compared with biomarker performance in the prediction of premalignant and malignant disease. Methylation status of 9 genes was analyzed in salivary rinses of 191 patients by Quantitative methylation-specific PCR. RESULTS: HOXA9, EDNRB and DCC methylation were associated (p=0.012; p<0.0001; p=0.0005) with premalignant or malignant disease. On multivariable modeling, histological diagnosis was only independently associated with EDNRB (p=0.0003) or DCC (p=0.004) methylation. A subset of patients received clinical risk classification (CRC) by expert clinicians based on lesion examination. CRC, DCC and EDNRB were associated with diagnosis of dysplasia/cancer on univariate (p=0.008; p=0.026; p=0.046) and multivariate analysis (p=0.012; p=0.037; p=0.047). CRC identified dysplasia/cancer with 56% of sensitivity and 66% of specificity with similar AUC (0.61, 95%CI=0.60-0.81) when compared to EDNRB and DCC combined AUC (0.60, 95%CI=0.51-0.69), sensitivity of 46% and specificity of 72%. Combination of EDNRB, DCC and CRC was optimal AUC (0.67, 95%CI=0.58-0.76). CONCLUSION: EDNRB and/or DCC methylation in salivary rinses compares well to examination by an expert clinician in CRC of oral lesions. These salivary biomarkers may be particularly useful in oral premalignancy and malignancy screening in clinical care settings in which expert clinicians are not available.
PMCID:3687013
PMID: 23637120
ISSN: 1078-0432
CID: 346872

Why JADE? Why now?

Northridge, Mary E; Robbins, Miriam
ORIGINAL:0008911
ISSN: 2472-0062
CID: 949922

Communication methods and adaptive measures for a patient with Usher Syndrome in the dental setting

Chapter by: Toppin, James D; Patel, Dharti; Watters, Amber L; Robbins, Miriam R; Newgard, Alison; Madani, Mojtaba
in: Clinical & Educational Scholarship Showcase by
[New York NY : NYU College of Dentistry. NYU Academy of Distinguished Educators], 2013
pp. 9-9
ISBN: n/a
CID: 852232

Oral florid Kaposi Sarcoma in a young patient with AIDS : challenges in dental management

Chapter by: Robbins, Miriam R; Okeke, Tochuwu; Watters, Amber L; Newgard, Alison; Patel, Dharti N; Toppin, James D
in: Clinical & Educational Scholarship Showcase by
[New York NY : NYU College of Dentistry. NYU Academy of Distinguished Educators], 2013
pp. 13-14
ISBN: n/a
CID: 852322

Mother/daughter case series on oral manifestations of systemic lupus erythematosus

Chapter by: Newgard, Alison; Kwan, Jason; Destine, Edly; Watters, Amber; Toppin, James; Robbins, Miriam; Patel, Dharti
in: Clinical & Educational Scholarship Showcase by
[New York NY : NYU College of Dentistry. NYU Academy of Distinguished Educators], 2013
pp. 15-15
ISBN: n/a
CID: 852352

Preventive oral strategies in a patient with Crest Syndrome

Chapter by: Patel, Dharti; Lewis-Smith, Morgan; Watters, Amber; Robbins, Miriam; Toppin, James; Newgard, Alison
in: Clinical & Educational Scholarship Showcase by
[New York NY : NYU College of Dentistry. NYU Academy of Distinguished Educators], 2013
pp. 16-16
ISBN: n/a
CID: 852362

Clinical experience with special care dentistry in pre-doctoral education : the New York University College of Dentistry special needs clinical rotation

Chapter by: Watters, Amber L; Robbins, Miriam; Newgard, Alison; Stabulas-Savage, Jeanine; Patel, Dharti; Toppin, James
in: Clinical & Educational Scholarship Showcase by
[New York NY : NYU College of Dentistry. NYU Academy of Distinguished Educators], 2013
pp. 27-27
ISBN: n/a
CID: 852532

Endothelin receptor type B gene promoter hypermethylation in salivary rinses is independently associated with risk of oral cavity cancer and premalignancy

Pattani, Kavita Malhotra; Zhang, Zhe; Demokan, Semra; Glazer, Chad; Loyo, Myriam; Goodman, Steven; Sidransky, David; Bermudez, Francisco; Jean-Charles, Germain; McCaffrey, Thomas; Padhya, Tapan; Phelan, Joan; Spivakovsky, Silvia; Bowne, Helen Yoo; Goldberg, Judith D; Rolnitzky, Linda; Robbins, Miriam; Kerr, A Ross; Sirois, David; Califano, Joseph A
Endothelin receptor type B (EDNRB) and kinesin family member 1A (KIF1A) are candidate tumor suppressor genes that are inactivated in cancers. In this study, we evaluated the promoter hypermethylation of EDNRB and KIF1A and their potential use for risk classification in prospectively collected salivary rinses from patients with premalignant/malignant oral cavity lesions. Quantitative methylation-specific PCR was performed to analyze the methylation status of EDNRB and KIF1A in salivary rinses of 191 patients. We proceeded to determine the association of methylation status with histologic diagnosis and estimate classification accuracy. On univariate analysis, diagnosis of dysplasia/cancer was associated with age and KIF1A or EDNRB methylation. Methylation of EDNRB highly correlated with that of KIF1A (P < 0.0001). On multivariable modeling, histologic diagnosis was independently associated with EDNRB (P = 0.0003) or KIF1A (P = 0.027) methylation. A subset of patients analyzed (n = 161) without prior biopsy-proven malignancy received clinical risk classification based on examination. On univariate analysis, EDNRB and risk classification were associated with diagnosis of dysplasia/cancer and remained significant on multivariate analysis (EDNRB: P = 0.047, risk classification: P = 0.008). Clinical risk classification identified dysplasia/cancer with a sensitivity of 71% and a specificity of 58%. The sensitivity of clinical risk classification combined with EDNRB methylation improved to 75%. EDNRB methylation in salivary rinses was independently associated with histologic diagnosis of premalignancy and malignancy and may have potential in classifying patients at risk for oral premalignant and malignant lesions in settings without access to a skilled dental practitioner. This may also potentially identify patients with premalignant and malignant lesions that do not meet the criteria for high clinical risk based on skilled dental examination.
PMCID:2945229
PMID: 20798208
ISSN: 1940-6215
CID: 2794102

Dental management of special needs patients who have epilepsy

Robbins, Miriam R
Patients who have developmental disabilities and epilepsy can be safely treated in a general dental practice. A thorough medical history should be taken and updated at every visit. A good oral examination to uncover any dental problems and possible side effects from antiepileptic drugs is necessary. Stability of the seizure disorder must be taken into account when planning dental treatment. Specific considerations for epileptic patients include the treatment of oral soft tissue side effects of medications and damage to the hard and soft tissue of the orofacial region secondary to seizure trauma. Most patients who have epilepsy can and should receive functionally and esthetically adequate dental care
PMID: 19269398
ISSN: 1558-0512
CID: 154878

Is dentistry at risk? A case for interprofessional education

Wilder, Rebecca S; O'Donnell, Jean A; Barry, J Mark; Galli, Dominique M; Hakim, Foroud F; Holyfield, Lavern J; Robbins, Miriam R
The goal of interprofessional education (IPE) is to bring various professional groups together in the educational environment to promote collaborative practice and improve the health care of patients. Interest in IPE has been sparked by several factors in the health care system, including the increased awareness of oral-systemic connections, an aging population, the shift of the burden of illness from acute to chronic care, and lack of access to basic oral care. Increasingly, since the publication of the U.S. surgeon general's report in 2000, the dialogue surrounding IPE in dentistry has escalated. But how has dentistry changed regarding IPE since the report was released? This position paper argues that little has changed in the way dental students are taught and prepared to participate in IPE. The authors contend that academic dentistry and organized dentistry must take the lead in initiating and demanding IPE if dental students are to be prepared to work in the health care environment of the twenty-first century. Included are reasons why IPE is necessary and why dentistry must lead the conversation and participate in the solution to the oral health care crisis. It explores existing models and alternate approaches to IPE, barriers to implementation, and proposed strategies for academic institutions
PMID: 18981201
ISSN: 0022-0337
CID: 153396