Histopathological Validation of Clinical Palpation vs. Ultrasonography for Cervical Lymphadenopathy in Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma: An Ambi-directional Cohort of 1,690 Nodes from Rural Karnataka, India

K. S. Uthra *

Department of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery, College of Dental Sciences- RGUHS, Davangere, Karnataka, India.

H. Y. Kiran

Department of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery, College of Dental Sciences- RGUHS, Davangere, Karnataka, India.

K. S. N. Siva Bharani

Department of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery, College of Dental Sciences- RGUHS, Davangere, Karnataka, India.

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

Background: Cervical lymph node metastasis reduces OSCC 5-year survival by 50%; accurate preoperative detection via clinical palpation vs. grayscale ultrasonography (USG) remains critical for treatment planning.​ It is established that better diagnostic resources are available that provide a more accurate assessment of cervical lymphadenopathy; however, they may not be feasible in low resource regions where the incidence of OSCC is high.

Aim and objective: The study aims to assess the diagnostic accuracy of clinical palpation with Gray-scale 2-D USG using the Histopathology assessment as the benchmark. The objective is to ascertain if USG is required in addition to clinical palpation in low-resource centers.

Methods: Retro-prospective analysis of 300 patients with biopsy-proven OSCC undergoing tumor resection and neck dissection at a Karnataka tertiary center; clinical palpation and USG (7-12MHz linear probe) assessed 1,690 cervical lymph nodes, correlated with post-operative histopathology (gold standard) to assess sensitivity, specificity, NPV and PPV.​

Results: Of all subsites, buccal mucosa (61%) was most common subsite; the mean age 45-55 years, male:female ratio of predilection was 2.4:1. USG demonstrated superior sensitivity (73.8%) compared to palpation (58.3%), NPV 92.7% vs. 87.0% respectively, with specificities 63.4% vs. 67.8% and PPV 27.9% vs. 30.8% respectively. The lymph node Level Ib/II demonstrated largest accuracy in assessment.

Conclusion: Grayscale USG can act as an added supplement to clinical palpation for reliable N0 neck identification in OSCC, supporting AJCC 8th staging protocols in resource-limited settings.​​

Keywords: OSCC, ultrasound, clinical palpation, histopathology


How to Cite

Uthra, K. S., H. Y. Kiran, and K. S. N. Siva Bharani. 2026. “Histopathological Validation of Clinical Palpation Vs. Ultrasonography for Cervical Lymphadenopathy in Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma: An Ambi-Directional Cohort of 1,690 Nodes from Rural Karnataka, India”. Asian Journal of Dental Sciences 9 (1):433-43. https://doi.org/10.9734/ajds/2026/v9i1332.

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