Type of cancer
|
Subtype
|
ICD-O Code
|
Epidemiology
|
Etiology
|
Localization
|
Clinical features
|
Diagnostic procedures
|
Squamous cell carcinoma
- Basaloid squamous cell carcinoma
- Papillary squamous cell carcinoma
- Spindle cell carcinoma
- Acantholytic squamous cell carcinoma
- Acantholytic squamous cell carcinoma
- Adenosquamous carcinoma
|
Verrucous carcinoma
|
8051/3
|
- Older males
- 5th and 6th decades of life
- Males are affected more often than females
|
|
- Lip SCC arise almost exclusively on the lower lip
- Buccal mucosa
- Upper and lower gingiva
- Hard palate
- Anterior two-thirds of the tongue, including dorsal, ventral and lateral surfaces, and the floor of mouth
|
- Often asymptomatic or may present with vague symptoms and mini- mal physical finding
|
Biopsy shows:
Thickened club-shaped
papillae and blunt stromal invaginations
of well-differentiated squamous epitheli-
um with marked keratinization
|
Lymphoepithelial carcinoma
|
|
8082/3
|
0.8-2% of all oral or oropharyngeal cancers
|
EBV
|
- Tonsil and tongue(90%)
- Palate and buccal mucosa(others)
|
- Intra-oral mass, which may be ulcerated.
- Some tumors can be bilateral
|
Biopsy chows:
- Syncytial sheets and clusters of carcinoma cells with vesicular nuclei
- Prominent nucleoli and ill-defined cell borders
- A rich lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate is present
|
Epithelial precursor lesions
|
|
|
|
Smoking
|
Seen in the entire digestive tract
|
- White patches (leukoplakia)
- Red patches (erythroplasia/erythroplakia)
- Mixed red and white lesions
|
Biopsy shows:
- Hyperplasia
- Dysplasia, / squamous intraepithelial neoplasia / atypical hyperplasia
- Carcinoma in-situ
|
Proliferative verrucous leukoplakia and precancerous conditions
|
|
|
- Average age at diagnosis is 62 years
- Women are more commonly afflicted (ratio, 4:1)
|
Unknown
|
- Buccal mucosa in women
- Tongue in men.
|
An aggressive form of oral leukoplakia with considerable morbidity and
strong predilection to malignant transformation
|
Biopsy shows:
- Extensive, thick, white plaques
- Hyperplasia and dense hyperkeratosis
- Verrucous surface with hyperkeratosis, hypergranulosis and a dense inflammatory infiltrate in the corium
|
Papillomas
|
Squamous cell papilloma and
verruca vulgaris
|
|
- Common in children and in adults in the 3rd to 5th decades
- Almost equal sex incidence with a slight male predominance
|
HPV subtype
2,4,6,7,10,40.
|
Any oral site may be affected mostly:
- Labial mucosa
- Tongue
- Gingiva
|
lated lesions formed by a cluster of finger-like fronds or a sessile, dome-
shaped lesion with a nodular, papillary or
verrucous surface
|
Biopsy shows:
- Exophytic and comprise folds of hyperplastic stratified epithelium
- Cluster of finger-like projections
|
Condyloma acuminatum
|
|
2nd and 5th decade with a peak in teenagers and young adults
|
- HPV, most commonly types 6,11,16 and 18
|
- Labial mucosa
- Tongue
- Palate
|
- Painless, rounded, dome-shaped exophytic nodules
- Have a broad base and a nodular or mulberry-like surface that is slightly red, pink or of normal mucosal color.
- Lesions may be multiple and are then usually clustered
|
Biopsy shows:
Several sessile, cauliflower-like swellings forming a cluster
|
Focal epithelial hyperplasia
|
|
Disease of children,adolescents and young adults
|
HPV
13 and 32
|
- All areas of the oral cavity
- Labial
- Buccal mucosa
- Tongue
|
- Multiple asymptomatic lesions
- Soft rounded or flat plaque-like sessile swelling.
- Usually pink or white in color
- 2-10mm in diameter
|
Biopsy shows:
- Rounded sessile swelling formed by a sharply demarcated zone of epithelial acanthosis
- Koilocytes similar to those of squamous papilloma are usually present
- “Mitosoid bodies”, which are nuclei with coarse clumped heterochromatin resembling a mitotic figure
|
Granular cell tumour
|
|
9580/0
|
- Arise in all age groups, with a peak between 40 and 60 years
- Females are affect- ed more often than males with an M/F ratio of 2:1
|
No etiological factors are known
|
- Tongue is the most common single site
- Buccal mucosa
- Floor of oral cavity
- Palate
- Salivary gland
|
- Lesion presents as a smooth, sessile mucosal swelling
- 1-2 cm in diameter with a firm texture.
- The overlying epithelium is of normal color or may be slightly pale
|
Biopsy shows:
- Plump eosinophilic cells with central small dark nuclei and abundant granular cytoplasm
|
Keratoacanthoma
|
|
8071/1
|
whites
men as in women
|
Associated with uptake of carcinogens(e.g. via particular smoking habits)
|
- Skin of the face,including the lips
- Mucocutaneous linings may also be involved
|
- Verrucous, speckled or ulcerated lesions
- Deep projections, which extend through minor salivary glands and underlying bone
|
Biopsy shows:
- Verrucous surface, keratinized clefts and penetrating squamous rete processes
- Minimal atypia seen
|
Papillary hyperplasia
|
|
|
Affects all age groups
|
Associated with:
- Wearing ill-fit- ting dentures
- Xerostomia
- Individuals with a high arched palate
- HIV infection
|
Palate
|
Asymptomatic nodular or papillary mucosal lesion
|
Biopsy shows:
- Parakeratinisation or less frequently orthokeratinisation
|
Median rhomboid glossitis
|
|
|
|
Associated with chronic candidal infection
|
Dorsum of the tongue at the junction of the anterior two thirds
and posterior third
|
Forms a patch of papillary atrophy in the region of the
embryological foramen caecum
|
Biopsy shows:
- Areas of pseudoepitheliomatous hyperplasia
- Atypia may be present
|
Salivary gland tumours
|
Acinic cell carcinoma
|
8550/3
|
- 2-6.5% of all intraoral salivary gland tumors
- Age range was from 11-77 years, with a mean of 45 years
- Male to female ratio of 1.5:1
|
Unknown
|
- Buccal mucosa
- Upper lip and
- Palate
|
Tumors usually
form non-descript swellings
|
Biopsy shows:
- Solid sheets of epithelium with secretory material
- Ductal differentiation in tumors
|
Mucoepidermoid carcinoma
|
8430/3
|
- 9.5-23% of all minor gland tumors
|
Unknown
|
- Palate (most common site)
- Buccal mucosa
- Lips: upper>lower
- Floor of oral cavity
- Retromolar pad
|
- Asymptomatic
- Bluish, domed swellings that resemble mucoceles or haemangiomas
- High-grade tumors result in ulceration, loosening of teeth, paraesthesia or anaesthesia
|
Low power microscopy shows low-grade tumor with both cystic and solid areas and an inflamed, fibrous stroma
|
Adenoid cystic carcinoma
|
8200/3
|
- 42.5% of minor gland tumors
|
Unknown
|
- Tongue
- Tonsil
- Oropharynx
- Cheek
- Lips
- Retromolar pad and gingiva
|
- Slow growing submucosal masses and ulceration may be seen, particularly in the palate
- Pain, or evidence of nerve involvement, is usually only present in advanced tumors
|
Predominantly solid variant shows peri- and intraneural invasion.
|
Epithelial-myoepithelial
carcinoma
|
8562/3
|
|
Unknown
|
|
|
|
Clear cell carcinoma,
NOS
|
8310/3
|
|
Unknown
|
|
|
|
Basal cell
adenocarcinoma
|
8147/3
|
Rare in minor glands
|
Unknown
|
|
Asymptomatic, smooth or lobulated sub-mucosal masses
|
Microscopically similar to basal
cell adenocarcinomas of the major
gland
|
Cystadenocarcinoma
|
8450/3
|
32% developed in the minor glands
|
Unknown
|
- Palate
- Lips
- Buccal mucosa
- Tongue and retromolar regions.
|
Slow growing and painless but
some palatal tumors may erode the
underlying bone causing
sinonasal complex.
|
|
Salivary duct carcinoma
|
8500/3
|
- Rare in minor salivary glands
- Age range was 23-80 years (mean 56 years)
|
Unknown
|
- Palate (65%)
- Buccal mucosa and vestibule (19%)
- Tongue (8%)
- Retromolar pad (4%) and upper lip (4%)
|
Tumours formed painless swellings but many in the palate can be painful and ulcerated or fungated with metastases to regional lymph nodes.
|
The range of
microscopical appearances os similar
to that seen in the major glands.
|
Salivary gland adenomas
|
Pleomorphic adenoma
|
8940/0
|
40-70% of minor gland tumors
|
Unknown
|
- Palate
- Lips and
- Buccal mucosa
|
Painless, slow growing, submucosal masses, but when
traumatized may bleed or ulcerate.
|
Biopsy shows cellular, and hyaline or plasmacytoid cell
|
Myoepithelioma
|
8982/0
|
42% of minor gland tumors
|
Unknown
|
- Palate of younger individuals
|
|
|
Basal cell adenoma
|
8147/0
|
20% of minor gland tumors
|
Unknown
|
|
|
They are histologically
similar to those in major glands.
|
Cystadenoma
|
8149/0
|
7% of benign minor gland tumors
|
Uknown
|
|
|
|
Kaposi sarcoma
|
|
|
- Classic (elderly men of Mediterranean/EastEuropean descent)
- Endemic ( middle-aged adults and children in Equatorial Africa who are not HIV infected)
- Iatrogenic (Immunosuppressed, post-transplant)
- AIDS associated (HIV-1 infected individuals)
|
- HHV-8
- Immunologic, genetic, and environmental factors
|
- Skin ( most common)
- Mucosal mem- branes such as oral mucosa, lymph nodes and visceral organs
|
- Purplish, reddish blue or dark brown macules
- Plaques and nodules that may ulcerate
|
Biopsy of all 4 types show:
- Vascular slits and sparsely distributed lymphocytes.
|
Lymphangioma
|
|
9170/0
|
- Pediatric lesions
- Present at birth or during the first years of life.
- Appear mostly in the head and neck area but may be found in any other part of the body
|
- Developmental malformation
- Genetic abnormalities
- Turner's syndrome
|
Tongue
|
- Circumscribed painless swelling
- Soft and fluctuant on palpation
- Irregular nodularity of the dorsum of the tongue
|
Biopsy shows:
- Thin-walled, dilated lymphatic vessels of different size, which are lined by a flattened endothelium
|
Ectomesenchymal chondromyxoid
tumour of the anterior tongue
|
|
|
- Age range varies from 9-78 years
- No distinct sex predilection.
|
Unknown
|
|
Asymptomatic, slow growing solitary nodule in the anterior dorsal tongue
|
Biopsy shows:
- Round, cup-shaped, fusiform, or polygonal cells with uniform small nuclei and moderate amounts of faintly basophilic cytoplasm
- Some tumors may show nuclear pleomorphism, hyperchromatism, and multinucleation
|
Focal oral mucinosis (FOM)
|
|
|
- The lesion affects all ages
- Rare in children
- There is no distinct sex predilection.
|
Unknown
|
- Gingiva( most common site)
- Palate
- Cheek mucosa and
- Tongue
|
Asymptomatic fibrous or cystic-like lesion
|
Histopathology is characterized by:
- Well-circumscribed area of myxomatous
tissue
- Fusiform or stellate fibroblasts
- Absent or sparse reticular fibres
- Mucinous material shows alcianophilia at pH 2.5
|
Congenital granular cell epuli
|
|
|
- Affects newborns
- Females are affected ten times more often than males
|
Etiology uncertain
|
|
Solitary, somewhat pedunculated fibroma-like lesion attached to the alveolar
ridge near the midline
|
- Ultrasound for prenatal diagnosis
- Immuno histochemically, the tumor cells are positive for vimentin and neuron specific enolase
- No reactivity with cytokeratin, CEA, desmin, hormone receptors or S-100
|
Haematolymphoid tumours
|
Non-Hodgkin lymphoma
|
|
Second most com-
mon cancer of the oral cavity
|
- There is no known etiology in most patients.
- Underlying immunodeficiency state (e.g. HIV Infection)
- Strong association with EBV
|
- Floor of mouth
- Gingiva
- Buccal mucosa
- Lips
- Palatine tonsils
- Lingual tonsils or
- Oropharynx
|
NHL of the lip presents with:
- Ulcer
- Swelling,
- Discoloration
- Pain
- Paraesthesia
- Anaesthesia, or
- Loose teeth
|
Biopsy shows:
- Large cells with predominantly round nuclei and membrane-bound nucleoli, consistent with centroblastic morphology.
- Predominantly medium-sized cells with abundant pale cytoplasm.
- Large cells with round or multilobated nuclei
|
Langerhans cell histiocytosis
|
9751/1
|
|
Associated with:
- Eosinophilic granulomas
- Multifocal multisystem disease
|
- Jaw bone
- Intraoral soft tissues
- Gingiva
- Palate
- Floor of mouth
- Buccal mucosa
and
|
Common oral symptoms
include:
- Swelling
- Pain
- Gingivitis
- Loose teeth and
- Ulceration
|
Biopsy shows ovoid Langerhans cells
with deeply grooved nuclei, thin nuclear membranes and abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm
|
Hodgkin lymphoma
|
|
|
Strongly associated with Epstein- Barr Virus
|
- Waldeyer ring, particularly the pala-tine tonsil
- Oropharynx
- Alveolar crest of mandible
- Maxillary gingiva
|
Most patients present with localized disease (stage I/II), with
- Chronic tonsillitis or tonsillar enlargement with or without enlarged cervical lymph nodes
|
|
Extramedullary myeloid
sarcoma
|
9930/3
|
|
History of acute myeloid leukaemia,
predominantly in the monocytic or
myelomonocytic subtypes
|
|
Isolated tumor-forming intraoral mass
|
Biopsy shows an Indian-file pattern of infiltration
|
Follicular dendritic cell
sarcoma / tumour
|
9758/3
|
|
History of underlying hya-line-vascular Castleman disease
|
- Tonsil
- Palate or
- Oropharynx.
|
The patients usually
present with a painless mass
|
Biopsy usually exhibits
borders and comprises:
- Storiform arrays or
- Diffuse sheets of spindly to ovoid tumour cells sprinkled with small lymphocytes
|
Mucosal malignant melanoma
|
|
8720/3
|
- 0.5% of oral malignancies
- Incidence 0.02 per 100,000
|
No known etiological factors associated with oral melanoma
|
80% arise:
- Palate
- Maxillary alveolus or gingivae
- Mandibular
gingivae
Others:
|
- Asymmetric with irregular outlines
- Macular pigmentation
- Nodular growth
- Ulceration
- Melanosis
|
- Biopsy:
- S100 positive
- Negative for cytokeratins
- More specific markers include:
- HMB45,
- Melan-A or anti-tyrosinase
|