A study was conducted to compare various parameters associated  with oral cancer in young and old patients and systematically compile the data  on prognosis or outcome of oral cancer in young and old patients that include  case series, matched-pair analyses, institutional series, and database reviews.
    Though oral cancer is considered a disease of old age, a recent  clinical scenario witnesses its increasing incidence among young persons. When  compared to old patients, young patients with oral cancer are exposed to the  carcinogens for a very petite period of time suggesting underlying pathogenesis  to be distinct from that in older individuals. Literature reports several  studies about the occurrence of oral cancer in young patients; however, no  unanimous opinion exists about its prognosis and treatment outcomes when  compared to older patients.
    Keeping this in mind, we have extensively studied all the  possible aspects (location, local and regional recurrence, nodal and distant  metastasis, overall survival, etc.) from the English literature and  systematically compiled the available data on prognosis or outcomes of oral  cancer.
    The Review results are: 
    The overall outcome of the case series shows poorer  prognosis in young patients, matched-pair analyses, and institutional series suggesting  no significant differences whereas the databases favoured a better prognosis in  young patients. The mean overall survival rate was found to be better for young  patients in the database and institutional review whereas worse in the  matched-pair analyses. The mean 5-year survival rate was found to be more in  young individuals in matched-pair analyses, database reviews, and institutional  series as compared to older oral cancer patients.
    Thus, the researchers concluded that though data extracted  from various study designs are heterogeneous, the present review gives a  scoping view of the papers published on oral cancer in young vs old patients.  More prospective studies are suggested with a larger sample size in the future.  The present review will help to better understand the nature, course, and  biologic behavior of oral cancer in young patients leading to the development  of specific treatment strategies to manage the patients based on their  age-groups.
    Reference:
    Oral Cancer in Young vs Old Individuals: A Systematic Review  by Gargi Sarode et al. published in The Journal of Contemporary Dental Practice.
    https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Vini-Mehta/publication/353306519_Oral_Cancer_in_Young_vs_Old_Individuals_A_Systematic_Review/links/60f3adf69541032c6d49d68a/Oral-Cancer-in-Young-vs-Old-Individuals-A-Systematic-Review.pdf
     
     
     
 
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