Oral cancer differential diagnosis
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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]
Overview
There are different types of cancers of the oral cavity and oropharynx. It is important that they are differentiated from one another.
Oral cancer must be differentiated from actinic keratosis, dermatologic manifestations of oral leukoplakia, erythroplasia, lichen planus and mucosal candidiasis.
Oral cancer differential diagnosis
Type of cancer | Subtype | ICD-O Code | Epidemiology | Etiology | Localization | Clinical features | Diagnostic procedures |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Squamous cell carcinoma
|
Verrucous carcinoma | 8051/3 |
|
|
|
|
Biopsy shows:
Thickened club-shaped papillae and blunt stromal invaginations of well-differentiated squamous epitheli- um with marked keratinization |
Lymphoepithelial carcinoma | |||||||
Epithelial precursor lesions | Seen in the entire digestive tract | White patches (leukoplakia) and red patches (erythroplasia/erythroplakia) or mixed red and white lesions | Biopsy shows:
| ||||
Proliferative verrucous leukoplakia and precancerous conditions |
|
Unknown |
|
An aggressive form of oral leukoplakia with considerable morbidity and
strong predilection to malignant transformation |
Biopsy shows:
| ||
Papillomas | Squamous cell papilloma and
verruca vulgaris |
|
HPV subtype
2,4,6,7,10,40. |
Any oral site may be affected mostly:
|
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:
| |
Condyloma acuminatum | 2nd and 5th decade with a peak in teenagers and young adults |
|
|
|
Biopsy shows:
Several sessile, cauliflower-like swellings forming a cluster | ||
Focal epithelial hyperplasia | Disease of children,adolescents and young adults | HPV
13 and 32 |
|
|
Biopsy shows:
| ||
Granular cell tumour | 9580/0 |
|
No etiological factors are known |
|
|
Biopsy shows:
| |
Keratoacanthoma | 8071/1 |
whites
men as in women |
Associated with uptake of carcinogens(e.g. via particular smoking habits) |
|
|
Biopsy shows:
| |
Papillary hyperplasia | Affects all age groups | Associated with:
|
Palate | Asymptomatic nodular or papillary mucosal lesion | Biopsy shows:
| ||
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:
| |||
Salivary gland tumours | Acinic cell carcinoma | 8550/3 |
|
Unknown |
|
Tumors usually
form non-descript swellings |
Biopsy shows:
|
Mucoepidermoid carcinoma | 8430/3 |
|
Unknown |
|
|
Low power microscopy shows low-grade tumor with both cystic and solid areas and an inflamed, fibrous stroma | |
Adenoid cystic carcinoma | 8200/3 |
|
|
|
Predominantly solid variant shows peri- and intraneural invasion. | ||
Epithelial-myoepithelial
carcinoma |
8562/3 | ||||||
Clear cell carcinoma,
NOS |
8310/3 | ||||||
Basal cell
adenocarcinoma |
8147/3 | Rare in minor glands |
|
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 |
|
Slow growing and painless but
some palatal tumors may erode the underlying bone causing sinonasal complex. |
|||
Mucinous adenocarcinoma | 8480/3 | ||||||
Oncocytic carcinoma | 8290/3 | ||||||
Salivary duct carcinoma | 8500/3 |
|
|
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. | ||
Myoepithelial carcinoma | 8982/3 | ||||||
Carcinoma ex pleomorphic
adenoma |
8941/3 | ||||||
Salivary gland adenomas | Pleomorphic adenoma | 8940/0 | 40-70% of minor gland tumors |
|
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 |
|
||||
Basal cell adenoma | 8147/0 | 20% of minor gland tumors |
|
They are histologically
similar to those in major glands. | |||
Cystadenoma | 8149/0 | 7% of benign minor gland tumors |
|
||||
Kaposi sarcoma |
|
|
|
|
Biopsy of all 4 types show:
| ||
Lymphangioma | 9170/0 |
|
|
Tongue |
|
Biopsy shows:
| |
Ectomesenchymal chondromyxoid
tumour of the anterior tongue |
|
Asymptomatic, slow growing solitary nodule in the anterior dorsal tongue | Biopsy shows:
| ||||
Focal oral mucinosis (FOM) |
|
|
Asymptomatic fibrous or cystic-like lesion | Histopathology is characterized by:
tissue
| |||
Congenital granular cell epuli |
|
Etiology uncertain |
|
Solitary, somewhat pedunculated fibroma-like lesion attached to the alveolar
ridge near the midline |
| ||
Haematolymphoid tumours | Non-Hodgkin lymphoma | Second most com-
mon cancer of the oral cavity |
|
|
NHL of the lip presents with:
|
Biopsy shows:
| |
Extramedullary plasmacytoma | 9734/3 | ||||||
Langerhans cell histiocytosis | 9751/1 | Associated with:
|
and
|
Common oral symptoms
include:
|
Biopsy shows ovoid Langerhans cells
with deeply grooved nuclei, thin nuclear membranes and abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm | ||
Hodgkin lymphoma | Strongly associated with Epstein- Barr Virus |
|
Most patients present with localized disease (stage I/II), with
|
||||
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 |
|
The patients usually
present with a painless mass |
Biopsy usually exhibits
borders and comprises:
| |
Mucosal malignant melanoma | 8720/3 |
|
No known etiological factors associated with oral melanoma | 80% arise:
gingivae Others:
|
|
|