A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Occurrence of sinonasal intestinal‐type adenocarcinoma and non‐intestinal‐type adenocarcinoma in two countries with different patterns of wood dust exposure




AuthorsLeivo Ilmo, Holmila Reetta, Luce Danièle, Steiniche Torben, Dictor Michael, Heikkilä Pirjo, Husgafvel‐Pursiainen Kirsti, Wolff Henrik

PublisherMDPI

Publication year2021

JournalCancers

Journal name in sourceCancers

Article number5245

Volume13

Issue20

eISSN2072-6694

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13205245

Web address https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6694/13/20/5245

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/67652731


Abstract

Sinonasal intestinal-type adenocarcinoma is strongly associated with hardwood dust exposure. Non-intestinal-type adenocarcinoma is a rarer and less well-known subtype considered not to be related with wood dust exposure. We determined the relative numbers of these two tumor types in 56 sinonasal adenocarcinoma patients in France and Finland, relating them with carefully assessed wood dust exposure histories. Diagnostic workup including immunohistochemistry for the intestinal markers CDX2 and CK20 indicated that the proportions of the two tumors differed significantly between France and Finland. In Finnish samples non-intestinal adenocarcinomas were more common than intestinal-type adenocarcinomas (12 non-intestinal vs. nine intestinal), while in the French samples the reverse was true (six non-intestinal vs. 29 intestinal). Such remarkably dissimilar occurrence of these tumors in France and Finland presumably reflects different pathogenetic circumstances in the two countries, and perhaps their different patterns of wood dust exposure. In France the main source of wood dust is from hardwoods. In Finland it is derived from softwoods. This is the first systematic comparison of the occurrence of intestinal-type adenocarcinoma and non-intestinal-type adenocarcinoma in two countries with different wood usage. It appears to be the first systematic study on differences in wood dust exposure between intestinal-type adenocarcinoma and non-intestinal-type adenocarcinoma.


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