Ameloblastoma classification
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] ; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Simrat Sarai, M.D. [2], Vamsikrishna Gunnam M.B.B.S [3]
Overview
Ameloblastoma may be classified based on histopathology into six subtypes including follicular, plexiform, acanthomatous, basal cell, granular cell, and desmoplastic. Based on the location, ameloblastoma may be divided into either intra-osseous or extra-osseous. Based on the radiologic features, ameloblastoma may be classified into four groups including solid or multicystic, unicystic, peripheral, and malignant.
Classification
Ameloblastoma may be classified into following subtypes based on the location:[1][2][3][4][5]
- Intraosseous
- Intraosseous ameloblastoma is locally aggressive
- Intraosseous ameloblastoma may include the histological subtypes such as follicular, plexiform, acanthomatous, unicystic, granular cell, basal cell, or desmoplastic
- Extra-osseous
- Extraosseous ameloblastoma may include the histological subtypes such as follicular, plexiform, or basal cell
- Extraosseous ameloblastoma is benign
- Extraosseous ameloblastoma is also known as peripheral ameloblastoma
Based on radiology, intraosseous ameloblastoma may be subclassified into two groups which includes the following:
- Solid/multicystic
- More commonly reoccur
- Unicystic
- Unlikely to reoccur
- Classically found in younger individuals
Ameloblastoma may be classified into following subtypes based on the clinicoradiologic into four groups:[6][1][2][3][4][7]
- Solid or multicystic
- Solid ameloblastoma is the most common form of the lesion.
- Approximately 86% of the ameloblastoma are solid. It has a tendency to be more aggressive than the other types and has a higher incidence of recurrence.
- Multicystic ameloblastomacan infiltrate into the adjacent tissue and may metastasize and has the ability to recur.
- It is prevalent in a slightly older age group than the unicystic ameloblastoma.
- Radiographically, the appearance is generally multilocular or unilocular.
- Unicystic
- Unicystic ameloblastoma has a large cystic cavity with intraluminal, luminal, or mural proliferation of ameloblastic cells.
- Unicystic ameloblastoma is a less aggressive variant and it has a low rate of recurrence although lesions showing mural invasion are an exception and should be treated more aggressively.
- The unicystic ameloblastoma usually appears as a “cystic” lesion with either an intramural or an intraluminal proliferation of the cystic lining.
- Radiographically, it can resemble a well-circumscribed slow-growing radiolucency.[7]
- Peripheral
- Histologically, the peripheral ameloblastoma appears similar to the solid ameloblastoma.
- Peripheral ameloblastoma is uncommon, usually presenting as a painless, non-ulcerated sessile or pedunculated gingival lesion on the alveolar ridge.
- Peripheral ameloblastoma mostly appears in the alveolar mucosa. It is a soft-tissue version of an ameloblastoma but may also involve the underlying bone.
- Malignant
- The malignant ameloblastoma is a rare entity. It is defined as an ameloblastoma that has already metastasized but still maintains its classical microscopic features.
- The WHO classification of odontogenic tumors (2005) defines malignant ameloblastoma as, “an ameloblastoma that metastasizes in spite of a benign histological appearance".
- Even if metastasis is absent, ameloblastoma with cytological atypia is defined as ameloblastic carcinoma.
- Thus, malignant ameloblastoma is defined as a retrospective diagnosis that can only be made when metastasis occurs.
- In majority of cases, it not only maintains the histological characteristics of the parent tumor but also continues to display similarly indolent clinical behavior.
Differentiating features of three different subtypes of ameloblastoma is shown below in a tabular form:
Subtypes of Ameloblastoma | Percentage of Ameloblastoma | Age | Sites affected | Additional features |
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Ameloblastoma may be classified into following subtypes based on the histology:[8]
- Follicular
- Plexiform
- Acanthomatous
- Granular cell
- Basal cell
- Desmoplastic
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References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Singh M, Shah A, Bhattacharya A, Raman R, Ranganatha N, Prakash P (2014). "Treatment algorithm for ameloblastoma". Case Rep Dent. 2014: 121032. doi:10.1155/2014/121032. PMC 4274852. PMID 25548685.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Gümgüm S, Hoşgören B (2005). "Clinical and radiologic behaviour of ameloblastoma in 4 cases". J Can Dent Assoc. 71 (7): 481–4. PMID 16026635.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Toledo-Pereyra LH, Bergren CT (1987). "Liver preservation techniques for transplantation". Artif Organs. 11 (3): 214–23. PMID 3304226.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Poser CM (1973). "Demyelination in the central nervous system in chronic alcoholism: central pontine myelinolysis and Marchiafava-Bignami's disease". Ann N Y Acad Sci. 215: 373–81. PMID 4513681.
- ↑ Ameloblastoma. Libre pathology(2015) http://librepathology.org/wiki/index.php/Ameloblastoma Accessed on December 25, 2015
- ↑ Laborde, A.; Nicot, R.; Wojcik, T.; Ferri, J.; Raoul, G. (2017). "Ameloblastoma of the jaws: Management and recurrence rate". European Annals of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Diseases. 134 (1): 7–11. doi:10.1016/j.anorl.2016.09.004. ISSN 1879-7296.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 Ameloblastoma. Radiopedia(2015) http://radiopaedia.org/articles/ameloblastoma Accessed on December 25, 2015
- ↑ Masthan KM, Anitha N, Krupaa J, Manikkam S (April 2015). "Ameloblastoma". J Pharm Bioallied Sci. 7 (Suppl 1): S167–70. doi:10.4103/0975-7406.155891. PMC 4439660. PMID 26015700.