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Unveiling mechanistic effects of mast cell in the progression of fibrosis and malignant transformation of oral submucous fibrosis: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Biotechnic & histochemistry : official publication of the Biological Stain Commission 2026 Vol.101(2) p. 109-118

R K, Chandra A, Raja D, Agarwal R

📝 환자 설명용 한 줄

Oral submucous fibrosis (OSMF) is a ubiquitous fatal fibrotic mucosal disease with multifactorial etiology and complex pathogenesis.

🔬 핵심 임상 통계 (초록에서 자동 추출 — 원문 검증 권장)
  • 연구 설계 systematic review

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BibTeX ↓ RIS ↓
APA R K, Chandra A, et al. (2026). Unveiling mechanistic effects of mast cell in the progression of fibrosis and malignant transformation of oral submucous fibrosis: a systematic review and meta-analysis.. Biotechnic & histochemistry : official publication of the Biological Stain Commission, 101(2), 109-118. https://doi.org/10.1080/10520295.2025.2595966
MLA R K, et al.. "Unveiling mechanistic effects of mast cell in the progression of fibrosis and malignant transformation of oral submucous fibrosis: a systematic review and meta-analysis.." Biotechnic & histochemistry : official publication of the Biological Stain Commission, vol. 101, no. 2, 2026, pp. 109-118.
PMID 41410520

Abstract

Oral submucous fibrosis (OSMF) is a ubiquitous fatal fibrotic mucosal disease with multifactorial etiology and complex pathogenesis. The role of mast cells in the pathophysiology of OSMF remains uncharted territory owing to a dearth of studies. Thus, the present systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to unentangle the mysteric role of mast cells in the pathogenesis, progression of fibrosis and malignant transformation of OSMF. Using various databases, full-text articles that investigated mast cell concentrations in OSMF were entailed for review. A modified Newcastle-Ottawa scale was employed to evaluate the risk of bias in all articles and Review Manager was utilized for meta-analysis. Twenty and fourteen qualified articles, respectively, were included for qualitative and quantitative data synthesis. Progressive amplification of mast cell density is linked with fibrosis-induced malignant transformation of OSMF. The fixed-effect model also confirmed that significantly upregulated mast cell counts have a decreased risk of association with control as well as a significantly increased risk of being associated with early-stage fibrosis and malignant transformation of OSMF. This review authenticates the mechanistic effects of mast cells in the pathogenesis, chronicity, progression of fibrosis and malignant transformation of OSMF.

MeSH Terms

Mast Cells; Oral Submucous Fibrosis; Humans; Cell Transformation, Neoplastic; Disease Progression; Fibrosis