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Dive into the research topics where Jinhai Ye is active.

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Featured researches published by Jinhai Ye.


Histopathology | 2014

Overexpression of metabolic markers PKM2 and LDH5 correlates with aggressive clinicopathological features and adverse patient prognosis in tongue cancer

Chunping Yuan; Zhongwu Li; Yanling Wang; Bin Qi; Wei Zhang; Jinhai Ye; Heming Wu; Hongbin Jiang; Liang-Nian Song; Jianrong Yang; Jie Cheng

Pyruvate kinase M2 (PKM2) and lactate dehydrogenase 5 (LDH5) are two metabolic and oncogenic markers of cancer. In this study, we sought to investigate their expression patterns and prognostic value in tongue squamous cell carcinoma (TSCC).


Journal of Craniofacial Surgery | 2013

Spontaneous malignant transformation in craniomaxillofacial fibrous dysplasia.

Jie Cheng; Hongbo Yu; Dongmiao Wang; Jinhai Ye; Hongbin Jiang; Yunong Wu; Guofang Shen

Abstract Spontaneous malignant transformation in craniomaxillofacial fibrous dysplasia (FD) is extremely rare and its clinicopathological characteristics remain largely unknown. Here, we aimed to characterize the epidemiology and clinicopathological features of malignancies arising from preexisting FD by presenting data from a Chinese tertiary referral hospital and review of English and Chinese literatures. The craniomaxillofacial disease registry of Shanghai Ninth People’s Hospital was searched and reviewed to collect relevant information for patients diagnosed as malignant transformation in craniomaxillofacial FD between January 1993 and December 2010. An English and Chinese literature review was conducted to retrieve pertinent cases published in the past 2 decades with preset inclusion criteria. All included cases were further analyzed with regard to associated clinical and pathological variables. Three cases with osteosarcoma arising from previous craniomaxillofacial FD were found at our institution and 35 other cases were identified by literature review. These uncommon entities usually occurred in adults with a mean age of 39.8 years and equal gender preponderance. Maxilla remained the most common sites for malignancies followed by mandible and zygoma. Most malignancies were diagnosed as osteosarcoma followed by fibrosarcoma, chondrosarcoma, and malignant fibrous histiocytoma. Radical resection alone or with postoperative radiotherapy/chemotherapy remains the main treatment strategy with unfavorable prognosis due to local recurrence and distant metastasis. Taken together, our findings might for the first time provide the comprehensive information regarding the epidemiology, clinicopathological features, treatment, and prognosis of malignancies in craniomaxillofacial FD. Further investigations are warranted to improve early diagnosis and proper treatment for these uncommon entities.


Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases | 2012

An epidemiological and clinical analysis of craniomaxillofacial fibrous dysplasia in a Chinese population

Jie Cheng; Yanling Wang; Hongbo Yu; Dongmiao Wang; Jinhai Ye; Hongbin Jiang; Yunong Wu; Guofang Shen

BackgroundCraniomaxillofacial fibrous dysplasia (FD) is a benign bone lesion characterized by facial disfigurement and functional impairment. The aim of this study was to characterize the epidemiological and clinical features of craniomaxillofacial FD by presenting data from a representative Chinese population during a 15-year period (1994–2009).MethodThe craniomaxillofacial disease registries of two Chinese tertiary referral hospitals (Shanghai Ninth People’s Hospital and Stomatological hospital of Jiangsu Province) were searched and reviewed to collect relevant information for patients with craniomaxillofacial FD between Jan.1994 and Dec.2009. All included cases were further analyzed with regard to associated epidemiological and clinicopathological variables.ResultsA total number of 266 cases with definitive diagnosis were identified with 219 primary cases and 47 recurrent cases. There were 111 males and 155 females with a male to female ratio of 0.716:1. They were clinically categorized into three groups: monostotic (71.1%), polysotic (27.4%) and Albright syndrome (1.5%). Maxilla alone or with adjacent bones was the most common affected site. The serum alkaline phosphatase (ALP) in patients was much higher than that in healthy control, whereas comparable between primary patients and recurrent ones. Three patients (3/266, 1.1%) with polysotic lesions underwent spontaneous malignant transformation into osteosarcoma. The majority of patients underwent conservative surgery, while the others received radical resection with or without reconstruction.ConclusionsCraniomaxillofacial FD is a rare bony disorder with defined epidemiological and clinicopathological features in Chinese population. Further investigations are warranted to establish the optimized timing, treatment strategy and prognostic prediction for this clinical entity.


Oncotarget | 2016

Axon guidance molecule semaphorin3A is a novel tumor suppressor in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma

Jie Chen; Wei Zhang; Yang Zheng; Zilu Wang; Laikui Liu; Heming Wu; Jinhai Ye; Bing Qi; Yunong Wu; Xiaomeng Song

Semaphorin3A (SEMA3A), an axon guidance molecule in the nervous system, plays an inhibitory role in oncogenesis. Here, we investigated the expression pattern and biological roles of SEMA3A in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) by gain-of-function assays using adenovirus transfection and recombinant human SEMA3A protein. In addition, we explored the therapeutic efficacy of SEMA3A against HNSCC in vivo. We found that lower expression of SEMA3A correlated with shorter overall survival and had independent prognostic importance in patients with HNSCC. Both genetic and recombinant SEMA3A protein inhibited cell proliferation and colony formation and induced apoptosis, accompanied by decreased cyclin E, cyclin D, CDK2, CDK4 and CDK6 and increased P21, P27, activated caspase-5 and caspase-7. Moreover, over-expression of SEMA3A suppressed migration, invasion and epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition due in part to the inhibition of NF-κB and SNAI2 in HNSCC cell lines. Furthermore, intratumoral SEMA3A delivery significantly stagnated tumor growth in a xenograft model. Taken together, our results indicate that SEMA3A serves as a tumor suppressor during HNSCC tumorigenesis and a new target for the treatment of HNSCC.


Oncotarget | 2013

The polycomb group protein EZH2 is a novel therapeutic target in tongue cancer

Zhongwu Li; Yanling Wang; Jing Qiu; Qiang Li; Chunping Yuan; Wei Zhang; Dongmiao Wang; Jinhai Ye; Hongbin Jiang; Jianrong Yang; Jie Cheng


Journal of Oral Pathology & Medicine | 2013

Overexpression of Hippo pathway effector TAZ in tongue squamous cell carcinoma: correlation with clinicopathological features and patients' prognosis

Zicheng Wei; Yanling Wang; Zhongwu Li; Chunping Yuan; Wei Zhang; Dongmiao Wang; Jinhai Ye; Hongbin Jiang; Yunong Wu; Jie Cheng


International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2009

Can we remove the preauricular incision: modified rhytidectomy incision in parotidectomy

Yunong Wu; Jinfei Chen; Xiaomeng Song; Heming Wu; Xu Ding; Jinhai Ye


International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2015

Reconstruction of palatomaxillary defects following cancer ablation with temporalis muscle flap in medically compromised patients: a 15-year single institutional experience

Jian Cheng; Jinhai Ye; Hengfang Wu; Linzhong Wan; Z. Tao; Hongbing Jiang; Wu Yj


International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2015

A novel tumor suppressor of axon guiding chemorepulsant semaphorin3a in oral squamous cell carcinoma

X. Song; Jinfei Chen; Hengfang Wu; Jian Cheng; Jinhai Ye; Xu Ding; Wu Yj


International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2013

Novel role for the transient receptor potential channel TRPM2 in proliferation and apoptosis of human tongue carcinoma cell

L.Y. Zhao; Jinhai Ye; Yaping Wu; Shuzhong Xing

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Heming Wu

Nanjing Medical University

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Hongbin Jiang

Nanjing Medical University

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Jie Cheng

Nanjing Medical University

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Yunong Wu

Nanjing Medical University

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Dongmiao Wang

Nanjing Medical University

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Jinfei Chen

Nanjing Medical University

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Wei Zhang

Nanjing Medical University

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Xu Ding

Nanjing Medical University

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Yanling Wang

Nanjing Medical University

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Chunping Yuan

Nanjing Medical University

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