Dr. Sheila Galvin

Dr. Sheila Galvin

, Dental Science

Publications and Further Research Outputs

  • Lynch, M., Ryan, A., Galvin, S., Flint, S., Healy, C.M., O'Rourke, N., Lynch, K., Rogers, S., Collins, P., Patch testing in oral lichenoid lesions of uncertain etiology, Dermatitis, 26, (2), 2015, p89-93Journal Article, 2015
  • Galvin, S., Flint, S.R., Healy, C.M., Ebola virus disease: review and implications for dentistry in Ireland, Journal of the Irish Dental Association, 61, (3), 2015, p141-143Journal Article, 2015
  • Galvin S, Bowe C, O Regan EM, Conlon N, Flint SR, Healy C, Circumorificial Plasmacytosis / Plasma cell mucositis: a case series and review of the literature , Oral Surgery Oral Medicine Oral Pathology and Oral Radiology, 122, (3), 2016, pe77 - e81Journal Article, 2016, DOI
  • Napeñas JJ, Kujan O, Arduino PG, Sukumar S, Galvin S, Baričević M, Costella J, Czerninski R, Peterson DE, Lockhart PB, Controversies regarding dental management of medically complex patients: assessment of current recommendations, Oral Surgery Oral Medicine Oral Pathology and Oral Radiology, 120, 2015, p207 - 226Journal Article, 2015
  • An unusual case of hyperpigmentation secondary to Irinotecan , Nestor L, Galvin S, Flint SR , 2016Case Study, 2016
  • Galvin S, Flint SR, Toner ME, Healy CM, Paraneoplastic Autoimmune Multiorgan Syndrome: Two case reports, Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology and Oral Radiology, American Academy of Oral Medicine, Orlando, Florida, April 2014, 117, (5), 2014, ppe367-Poster, 2014, DOI
  • Amer A, Galvin S, Healy CM, Moran GP, The Microbiome of Potentially Malignant Oral Leukoplakia Exhibits Enrichment for Fusobacterium, Leptotrichia, Campylobacter, and Rothia Species, Frontiers in Microbiology, 8, 2017, p2391Journal Article, 2017, DOI , URL
  • Abdrazak Amer, Sheila Galvin, Claire Healy & Gary P. Moran, The microbiome of oral leukoplakia shows enrichment in Fusobacteria and Rothia species, Journal of Oral Microbiology, 12th European Oral Microbiology Workshop, Stockholm, Sweden, May 25th-28th 2017, edited by Georgios Belibasakis , 9, (Supplement 1), Taylor and Francis, 2017, 1325253Conference Paper, 2017, DOI , URL
  • Galvin S, Flint SR, Toner ME, Healy CM, Ekanayake K., Oral lymphangiectasias and Crohn's disease: two case reports., Oral surgery, oral medicine, oral pathology and oral radiology, 126, (1), 2017, pe31 - e34Journal Article, 2017, DOI
  • Atkin PA, Thomas S, Cook JR, Greenwood M, Bennett JH, Willis A, Donachie C, NI Riordain R, Galvin S, Crighton A, Mighell A, Bakri I , Human Disease/Clinical Medical Sciences in Dentistry: current state and future directions of undergraduate teaching in the UK and Ireland, European Journal of Dental Education , 22, (3), 2018, pe588 - 3593Journal Article, 2018
  • Calado, Dr. Genecy, Behi, Ms. Isha, Pimentel, Dr. Marina Leite, Galvin, Dr. Sheila, Flint, Dr. Stephen, Byrne, Prof. Hugh J, Lyng, Prof. Fiona, RAMAN SPECTRAL STUDY OF SALIVA: A NEW TOOL FOR DETECTION OF MALIGNANT AND PREMALIGNANT ORAL LESIONS, Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology and Oral Radiology, 128, (1), 2019, pe90Journal Article, 2019, DOI
  • Behi, Ms. Isha, Calado, Dr. Genecy, Malkin, Ms. Alison, Galvin, Dr. Sheila, Flint, Dr. Stephen, Pimentel, Dr. Marina Leite, Byrne, Prof. Hugh J, Lyng, Prof. Fiona, MINIMALLY-INVASIVE ORAL EXFOLIATED CELLS STUDY FOR PREMALIGNANT LESIONS USING RAMAN MICROSPECTROSCOPY, Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology and Oral Radiology, 128, (1), 2019, pe28-e29Journal Article, 2019, DOI
  • Hugh J. Byrne, Isha Behl, Genecy Calado, Ola Ibrahim, Mary Toner, Sheila Galvin, Claire M. Healy, Stephen Flint, Fiona M. Lyng, Biomedical applications of vibrational spectroscopy: Oral cancer diagnostics, Spectrochimica Acta Part A: Molecular and Biomolecular Spectroscopy, 266:, 2022, p120437Journal Article, 2022, DOI , URL
  • Philip A. Atkin, Amanda Willis, Clare Doncahie, Ross O. C. Elledge, Steven J. Thomas, Richeal Ni Riordain, Sheila Galvin, Clare Marney, Jane F. Setterfield, Peter M. Smith, Douglas Hammond, Human disease/clinical medical sciences in dentistry: Current state and future development of undergraduate assessments in the UK and Ireland, European Journal of Dental Education, 2020Journal Article, 2020, DOI
  • , Oral manifestations of lupus., Irish journal of medical science, 2017Journal Article, 2017
  • Napeñas, J.J., Kujan, O., Arduino, P.G., Sukumar, S., Galvin, S., Bari"evi", M., Costella, J., Czerninski, R., Peterson, D.E., Lockhart, P.B., World Workshop on Oral Medicine VI: Controversies regarding dental management of medically complex patients: Assessment of current recommendations, Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology and Oral Radiology, 120, (2), 2015, p207-226Journal Article, 2015
  • Traynor D, Behl I, O'Dea D, Bonnier F, Nicholson S, O'Connell F, Maguire A, Flint S, Galvin S, Healy CM, Martin CM, O'Leary JJ, Malkin A, Byrne HJ, Lyng FM., Raman spectral cytopathology for cancer diagnostic applications., Nature protocols, 16, (7), 2021, p3716-3735Journal Article, 2021, DOI
  • Behl I, Calado G, Vishwakarma A, Traynor D, Flint S, Galvin S, Healy CM, Pimentel ML, Malkin A, Byrne HJ, Lyng FM., Classification of cytological samples from oral potentially malignant lesions through Raman spectroscopy: A pilot study., Spectrochimica acta. Part A, Molecular and biomolecular spectroscopy, 266, 2022, p120437Journal Article, 2022, DOI
  • Behl I, Calado G, Vishwakarma A, Flint S, Galvin S, Healy CM, Leite Pimentel M, Malkin A, Byrne HJ, Lyng FM., Raman microspectroscopic study for the detection of oral field cancerisation using brush biopsy samples., Journal of biophotonics, 13, (10), 2020, pe202000131Journal Article, 2020, DOI
  • Behl I, Calado G, Malkin A, Flint S, Galvin S, Healy CM, Pimentel ML, Byrne HJ, Lyng FM., A pilot study for early detection of oral premalignant diseases using oral cytology and Raman micro-spectroscopy: Assessment of confounding factors., Journal of biophotonics, 13, (11), 2020, pe202000079Journal Article, 2020, DOI
  • Galvin S, Moran GP, Healy CM., Influence of site and smoking on malignant transformation in the oral cavity: Is the microbiome the missing link?, Front Oral Health, 4, 2023, p1166037Journal Article, 2023, DOI
  • Galvin, Sheila, Anishchuk, Sviatlana, Healy, Claire M., Moran, Gary P., Smoking, tooth loss and oral hygiene practices have significant and site-specific impacts on the microbiome of oral mucosal surfaces: a cross-sectional study, Journal of Oral Microbiology, 15, (1), 2023, p2263971Journal Article, 2023, DOI
  • Healy, Claire M, Galvin, Sheila, Biological therapies and management of oral mucosal disease, British Dental Journal, 236, (4), 2024, p317-321Journal Article, 2024, DOI
  • Galvin S, Honari B, Anishchuk S, Healy CM, Moran GP., Oral Leukoplakia Microbiome Predicts the Degree of Dysplasia and is Shaped by Smoking and Tooth Loss., Oral diseases, 2025Journal Article, 2025, DOI
  • Sviatlana Anishchuk, Sheila Galvin, Gary Moran, Claire M Healy, Oral cancer perceptions amongst adult attendees of a Dental Hospital in the Republic of Ireland: A cross-sectional pilot study, Journal of the Irish Dental Association, 2024Journal Article, 2024, DOI
  • Aoife Boyle, Ian A. McDonald, Sheila Galvin, My mouth is on fire: a patient"s perspective of oral pemphigus vulgaris, Clinical and Experimental Dermatology, 49, (12), 2024, p1727 - 1728, p1727-1728Journal Article, 2024, DOI
  • M. Huston, Sviatlana Anishchuk, Gary P. Moran, Sheila Galvin, Claire M. Healy, ORAL POTENTIALLY MALIGNANT DISORDERS IN AN IRISH COHORT: PATIENT PROFILE AND OUTCOMES, International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, 52, 2023, p169 - 169, p169-169Journal Article, 2023, DOI
  • Galvin S, Healy CM, Oral hairy leukoplakia in healthy, immunocompetent individuals., Irish Medical Journal, 107, (6), 2014, p179-80Journal Article, 2014
  • Flint SR, Sharkey S, Galvin S, Warning: bisphosphonates and osteochemonecrosis of the jaws., Journal of the Irish Dental Association, 52, (2), 2006, p79-83Journal Article, 2006
  • Sheila Galvin, Anticoagulants and their implications for dental treatment, Irish Dental Association Annual Scientific Conference, Lyrath Hotel, Kilkenny, 13.05.17, 2017, Irih Dental AssociationInvited Talk
  • Sheila Galvin, White patches, Irish Dental association Annual Scientific Conference, Lyrath Hotel, Kilkenny, May 2014, 2014, irish Dental AssociationInvited Talk
  • Sheila Galvin, The Diabetic Patient, Irish Dental Association Annual Scientific Conference, Lyrath Hotel, Kilkenny, May 2014, 2014, Irish Dental AssociationInvited Talk
  • Sheila Galvin, Oral Medicine Intensive Revision Course, RCSI Intensive Revision Course, RCSI Dublin, Spetember 2016, 2016, RCSIInvited Talk

Research Expertise

  • Title
    Investigation of the microbiome of oral leukoplakia
    Summary
    The primary aim of this study was to investigate if the microbiome of oral leukoplakia (OLK), the most common of the 11 oral potentially malignant disorders, was associated with changes in the microbiome and whether these changes differed with differing degrees of dysplasia. Secondary aims included examining if changes in the microbiome could be used to predict whether an OLK was low (LROLK) or high risk (HROLK), establishing how other factors such as smoking affected the microbiome and which clinical and patient factors were associated the degree of dysplasia of OLK on histological analysis.
    Following ethical approval swabs were taken from histologically proven OLKs and contralateral normal (CLN) sites in patients who met the inclusion criteria. Healthy controls (HC) were also sampled at various mucosal sites. After DNA extraction, the V1-V3 region of the 16S rRNA gene was sequenced. RStudio was used for statistical analysis.
    189 patients with 225 OLKs were included in the analysis of clinical and patient features. The degree of dysplasia was found to be significantly associated with OLK site and clinical appearance with location on the tongue or floor of mouth and non-homogenous clinical appearance both significantly associated with severe dysplasia (both p=0.0005). OLKs on the dorsum or lateral tongue were 38.6 times more likely, and on the floor of mouth/ventral tongue 70.4 times more likely, to have severe dysplasia than OLKs on the buccal mucosa while non-homogeneity was associated with 25 times increased odds of having moderate or severe dysplasia.
    202 CLN and 120 HC samples from 241 subjects were then examined to investigate the influence of smoking, alcohol consumption, oral hygiene practices and mucosal site on the microbiome of healthy mucosa. Analysis using the R package MaAsLin2 found that smoking and oral site had the most significant influence on the oral microbiome. Smoking was associated with a shift to a more periodontal pathogen-heavy microbiome dominated by Prevotella, Actinomyces, Porphorymonas, Fusobacterium, Tannerella, Parvimonas, Filifactor, Bacteroidales, Clostridiales and Peptostreptococcus species, and reduced in healthy mucosa-associated species such as those of Neisseria, Streptococcus and Rothia genera. Site specificity was also identified.
    216 OLK sites and 202 CLN sites from 178 patients were then compared to establish if there were microbiome changes specific to OLK. After adjusting for multiple variables using the R package MaAslin2, OLK was consistently associated with increased abundance of five taxa: Bergeyella sp. HMT322, Streptococcus australis infantis clade 431, Gemella morbillorum, Leptotrichia sp. HMT215 and Leptotrichia sp. HMT392.
    OLKs were then divided into LROLK (no or mild dysplasia [n=91) and HROLK (moderate or severe dysplasia [n=125]) to investigate if differing degrees of dysplasia affected microbial colonisation. The microbial communities of LROLK and HROLK were found to exhibit significant changes, LROLKs were consistently associated with significantly increased abundances of Gemella morbillorum and Mogibacterium diversum, while HROLKs were associated with significantly increased abundances of Bergeyella sp. HMT322, Streptococcus australis infantis clade 431 and Leptotrichia sp. HMT215.
    Finally, predictive modelling using the top 50 microbial features from a preliminary modelling analysis could differentiate HROLK from LROLK with a sensitivity of 85.5% and specificity of 76.5%, while a combined model using both clinical/patient and microbial features could predict LROLK or HROLK with a sensitivity of 87.4% and specificity of 76.5%. Remarkably these models were considerably more accurate than models using clinical/patient factors alone. In conclusion, the microbiome of OLK was shown to differ significantly from that of normal mucosa. OLKs with different degrees of dysplasia were also found to exhibit significant differences in microbial composition.
    Funding Agency
    Irish Health Research Board
    Date From
    Sept 2017
    Date To
    Mar 2024

Recognition

  • Fellow Royal College of Surgeons, England
  • Fellow Royal College of Surgeons, Ireland
  • Member Royal College of Physicians, Ireland
  • Fellow British and Irish Society for Oral Medicine