Clinical efficacy of curcumin in treating oral submucous fibrosis and dynamic analysis of associated cytokines.
Juanhua Chai, Yang Li, Lu Zhang, Mengfei Yao, Yuxin Gu, Liye Song
Abstract
Open AccessOral submucous fibrosis (OSF) is a chronic, inflammation-driven precancerous condition. Current corticosteroid treatments often yield short-lived effects with adverse reactions. Curcumin's anti-inflammatory, antifibrotic, and immunomodulatory properties suggest therapeutic potential, but clinical evidence remains limited. This retrospective study enrolled 110 OSF patients (June 2023-September 2024), divided into a curcumin group (*n* = 54) and a triamcinolone group (*n* = 56), treated for 4 weeks. Outcomes included clinical efficacy, symptom improvement (visual analog scale [VAS] score, mouth opening, mucosal lesion area), and cytokine levels (IFN-γ, TGF-β1, TNF-α). The curcumin group showed higher total efficacy (88.89% vs 73.21%, P = .037), faster pain reduction (VAS: 2.25 ± 0.52 vs 2.86 ± 0.43 at week 4, P < .001), greater mouth opening (36.88 ± 2.07 mm vs 35.67 ± 2.71 mm, P < .05), and reduced lesion area (4.63 ± 0.54 cm² vs 5.61 ± 0.69 cm², P < .001). Serologically, curcumin increased IFN-γ (35.12 ± 5.05 pg/L vs 22.45 ± 4.50 pg/L, P < .001) and reduced TGF-β1 (1423.67 ± 290.35 pg/L vs 2750.45 ± 360.25 pg/L) and TNF-α (15.75 ± 5.43 pg/L vs 32.10 ± 7.25 pg/L, P < .001). In conclusion, curcumin outperformed triamcinolone in alleviating OSF symptoms, likely via dual regulation of IFN-γ (upregulation) and TGF-β1/TNF-α (downregulation), offering a promising therapeutic alternative.