19. Odontogenic Tumors Flashcards
Classify the odontogenic ectodermal tumors.
- Ectodermal - Ameloblastoma
- Calcifying Epithelial Odontogenic Tumor (Pindborg Tumor or CEOT)
- Adenomatoid Odontogenic Tumor (AOT)
- Squamous Odontogenic Tumor (SOT)
Classify the odontogenic mesodermal tumors.
Mesodermal -
- Central Odontogenic Fibroma
- Peripheral Odontogenic Fibroma
- “Odontogenic” Myxoma
- Cementum Lesions
- Central cemento-ossifying fibroma & Benign cementoblastoma “true cementoma” &
- Gigantiform cementoma)
Classify the odontogenic mixed (epithelial and connective tissue) tumors.
Mixed -
- Ameloblastic fibroma
- Ameloblastic fibro-odontoma
- Odontoma
Describe the characteristics, typical age and location, radiographic and histologic findings, treatment and variants of: Ameloblastoma
Most painless, all ages, more so in middle ages, can have cortical expansion, always radiolucent, epithelial islands and cords where peripheral cells show palisading (columnar) and reverse nuclearpolarity.
Tx: surgical curretage (50% recur). Variants: Peripheral, Unicystic, Malignant ameloblastoma “benign but metastasizes”, Ameloblastic carcinoma.
Calcifying epithelia lodontogenic tumor (CEOT)?
- All ages, more common in mandible, “driven snow” lucency to mixed lucent/opaque, often associated with unerupted teeth.
- Islands and sheets of pleomorphic epithelial cells.
- Tumor produces protein matrix similar to enamel matrix,
Tx: surgical.
Adenomatoid odontogenic tumor (AOT)?
- Common in teens, in maxilla, females, 3/4 anterior jaw and unerupted teeth asymptomatic.
- Radiolucent (pericoronal), may have flecks of opacity.
- Encapsulated swirls of epithelial cells containing rosettes or duct-like spaces lined by cuboidal or columnar cells.
- Tx: Enucleation
Squamous odontogenic tumor (SOT)?
- Radiolucency around tooth roots.
- Islands of well-differentiated squamous epithelium.
- Peripheral layer of calls flattened.
- Tx: Curettage
Describe the characteristics, typical age and location, radiographic and histologic findings, treatment and variants of: Central odontogenic fibroma?
- Benign, radiolucent to mixed lucent/opaque.
- 2 types:
- Simple - delicate fibrillar stroma of collagen containing fibroblasts.
- WHO type - stroma collagenous but may be more mature, variable amounts of odontogenic epithelium and calcifications.
- Tx: surgical removal
Peripheral odontogenic fibroma?
- Reactive gingival lesion of PDL origin, more common in young people and in the anterior gingiva.
- Cellular fibrous connective tissue with calcifications, bone, cementum, dystrophic.
Odontogenic myxoma?
- All ages, more common in young, asymptomatic, with or without expansion.
- Radiolucency often containing residual opaque trabeculae.
- Hypocellular tumor, scattered plump fibroblastic cells.
- Delicate collagen fibrils and abundant ground substance (glycosaminoglycans “GAGS”).
- Histology: often mistaken for normal anatomic structures (dental papilla or follicle). Tx: Block resection
Cementum lesions?
Inlcude
- Central cemento-ossifying fibroma
- Benign cementoblastoma
- Gigantiform cementoma
Central cement-ossifying fibroma
- Neoplasm of PDL origin.
- Adults, more commin in mandible, females, and blacks.
- Asymptomatic with or withour expansion. Well circumscribed, associated with tooth roots, completely lucent to mixed lucent/opaque to mostly opaque.
- Very cellular fibroblastic stroma, containing trabeculae of bone with cellular inclusions or “globules” of acellular cementum or both. Usually encapsulated.
- Tx: Enucleation
Benign cementoblastoma?
- “True Cementoma”
- 2-4 decades, more common in mandibular first molar, PAIN, may have expansion, tooth vital vs condensing osteitis - non vital.
- Radiographic
- sclerotic mass with peripheral radiolucent zone
- Fused with tooth root
- Radiopaque center. Sclerotic trabeculae of cementum with variable amounts of “active” fibroblastic stroma with giant cells.
- Peripheral trabeculae characteristically at right angles to surface. Fused to tooth root.
- Tx: Surgival removal, low recurrence
Gigantiform cementoma?
- Must be autosomal dominant
- Radiographic - multiquadrant globular opacities. Globular sclerotic masses of cementum, histology not diagnostic.
- Tx: Usually none
Describe the characteristics, typical age and location, radiographic and histologic findings, treatment and variants of: Ameloblastic fibroma?
- Young 1-3 decades, more common in posterior mandible, asymptomatic.
- ALWAYS radiolucent.
- Long strands or cords of epithelial cells resembling dental lamina in a highly cellular connective tissue of fibroblasts and delicate collagen fibrils.
- Tx: surgical removal.
- Variant: ameloblastic fibrosarcoma - rare malignant transformation of mesenchymal component