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 differential diagnosis

The table below outlines the different types of tumors/cancers present in the oral cavity and oropharynx and how they can be differentiated from one another.

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:
  • Hard and soft palate
  • Labial mucosa
  • Tongue
  • Gingiva
  • Soft, peduncu-

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
  • 15mm in diameter
  • 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
  • Occurs more often in

whites

  • Twice as frequent in

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:
  • Psoriasiform hyperplasia
  • 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
  • Palate
  • Buccal mucosa
  • Lip
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
  • Upper lip
  • Buccal mucosa
They are histologically

similar to those in major glands.

Cystadenoma 8149/0 7% of benign minor gland tumors Uknown
  • Lips
  • Cheek
  • Palate
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
  • Maxilla
  • Mandible
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
  • Palate,
  • Tongue
  • 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

  • Tonsil
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

  • Palate
  • Gingiva
Isolated tumor-forming intraoral mass Biopsy shows an Indian-file pattern of infiltration
Follicular dendritic cell

sarcoma / tumour

9758/3
  • Tumor of adulthood
  • Affects wide age range
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:

  • Fascicles
  • Whorls
  • Nodules,
  • 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:

  • Buccal mucosa
  • Floor of mouth
  • Tongue
  • 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

References


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