Abnormalities of FHIT, a candidate tumor suppressor gene located at 3pl4.2, have been found frequently in multiple tumor types, including head and neck squamous cell carcinoma. To determine the role of FHIT in tongue cancers, Fhit expression was determined by immunohistochemistry studies in tissue samples from 41 patients with stages II-IV squamous cell carcinomas of the tongue. All of the patients underwent curative surgical treatment with a median of 83 months of follow-up care. We found that 28 (68%) of the 41 tumor specimens demonstrated a lack of or significantly decreased staining for Fhit. Fhit expression tended to be stronger in well-differentiated tumor areas than it was in poorly differentiated areas, although this trend was not statistically significant. There was no significant correlation between Fhit expression and a patient's age or sex or the histological grade or clinical stage of disease. As expected, clinical stage and nodal involvement correlated with prognosis. Interestingly, patients whose tumors demonstrated low levels of or no Fhit expression had a significantly shorter time of disease-free survival than those whose tumors had high Fhit expression (P = 0.035, by log-rank test). This prognostic value of Fhit was independent of other clinical parameters, including stage of disease and nodal status. We conclude that Fhit plays an important role in the development of squamous cell carcinomas of the tongue and that loss of Fhit expression may be an independent prognostic indicator for clinical outcome in patients with this tumor type.