Adenomatoid odontogenic tumor

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Adenomatoid odontogenic tumor
ICD-O: M9300/0

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Sara Mohsin, M.D.[2]

Overview

The adenomatoid odontogenic tumor is an odontogenic tumor arising from the enamel organ or dental lamina. The most common location is in the anterior maxilla. In 75% of cases, it is associated with an unerupted tooth. Adenomatoid odontogenic tumor (AOT) is a rare tumor of epithelial origin comprising 3% of all the odontogenic tumors. It is a benign, painless, noninvasive, and slow-growing lesion, with a relative frequency of 2.2-13% and often misdiagnosed as an odontogenic cyst on clinical examination. AOT affects young individuals with a female predominance, occurs mainly in the second decade, and usually surrounds the crown of unerupted teeth. This lesion is most commonly located in the anterior maxilla and rarely in the mandible. It is usually associated with an impacted canine. AOT frequently resembles lesions like dentigerous cyst or ameloblastoma. AOT has three variants, follicular, extrafollicular, and peripheral. The intraoral periapical radiograph is the best radiograph to show radiopacities in AOT as discrete foci having a flocculent pattern within radiolucency even with minimal calcified deposits. These calcified deposits are seen in approximately 78% of the lesions. Herewith, we present the report of four unusual cases of AOT located in the mandible, with an emphasis on radiographic findings and on pathologic correlation, and on reviewing the existing literature on this tumor. Adenomatoid odontogenic tumor (AOT) is a rare tumor of epithelial origin comprising 3% of all the odontogenic tumors.[1,2] It was first described by Steensland in 1905. In 1907, AOT was described as pseudo-adenoameloblastoma by Dreibladt.[1] Stafne in 1948 considered AOT as a distinct entity, whereas others believed it to be a variant of ameloblastoma.[3,4] In 1969, Philipsen and Birn declined this thought and suggested the name ‘adenomatoid odontogenic tumor’. In 1971, the World Health Organization (WHO) adopted the term ‘adenomatoid odontogenic tumor’. Max and Stern, in 2003, coined the name ‘adenomatoid odontogenic cyst’.[3] Various terms like adenoameloblastoma, ameloblastic adenomatoid tumor, adamantinoma, epithelioma adamantinum, and teratomatous odontoma were used before the term AOT.[2,3]

AOT is a benign, painless, noninvasive, and slow-growing tumor that does not infiltrate the bone.[5] Clinically, it is often misdiagnosed as an odontogenic cyst. The tumor appears as an intraoral-extraoral swelling in the maxilla and is sometimes referred to as ‘two-third tumor’ because it occurs in the maxilla in about two-third cases, about two-third cases arise in young females, two-third cases are associated with an unerupted tooth, and two-third affected teeth are canines.[5,6] The origin of the AOT is controversial. It is thought to arise from odontogenic epithelium because it occurs in the tooth-bearing areas of the jaws, is often associated with the impacted tooth, and has various components of the enamel organ, dental lamina, reduced enamel epithelium, and/or their remnants.[4]

The purpose of this article is to report and analyze four unusual cases of AOT located in the mandible, with an emphasis on radiographic findings and with pathologic correlation, and to review the existing literature on this tumor.

Differential Diagnosis

It should be differentially diagnosed from a dentigerous cyst and the main differnce is that the radiolucency in case of AOT extends apically beyond the cementoenamel junction. Radiographs will exhibit faint flecks of radiopacities surrounded by a radiolucent zone.

Epidemiology and Demographics

AOT occurs mainly in the second decade of life, and is uncommon in patients older than 30 years of age. Females are more commonly affected than males with a ratio of 2:1, but it was not so in our analysis.[3,7] This female predilection is even more marked in Asian populations, the highest female incidence being observed in Sri Lanka (3.2:1) and Japan (3:1). The maxillary arch is the predominant site of occurrence, being almost twice as frequent as that of the mandible, and the anterior part of the jaw is more frequently involved than the posterior part.[5] Giansanti et al. (1970) reported that 65% AOTs were seen in the maxilla and 35% in the mandible. Of the maxillary lesions, 80% occurred in the anterior region, 14% in the premolar region, and few in the molar area. Of the mandibular lesions, 69% were found in the anterior region, 27% in the premolar region, and a few in the molar region.[8] It is pertinent to note that all our four cases had AOT in the anterior as well as posterior part of the mandible.[1] It is more common in young people and affects females more than males.[2][3][4][5][6][7]


AOT is frequently associated with an impacted tooth, a canine in more than 60% of the cases.[4] Permanent incisors, premolars, molars, and deciduous teeth are rarely involved. But more than one tooth may also be related with AOT as noticed in our case analysis wherein permanent incisors, canines, and premolars were involved with the lesion.

AOTs are relatively small in size. Usually, they do not exceed 1-3 cm in diameter.[9] However, some large tumors have been reported, and all our present cases had unusually large dimensions, that is, more than 3 cm.

The continuous slow growth of the lesion may cause cortical plate expansion leading to a painless hard swelling, asymmetry of the face, and displacement of the teeth, as was evident in our case analysis. As the growth is only within the confinement of the jaw bone, there is no invasion in the soft tissue. The slow-growing nature of the lesion may cause the patients to tolerate the swelling for years until it produces an obvious deformity. Delayed eruption of a permanent tooth or a regional swelling of the jaws may be the first symptom. Pain or other neurologic signs are not characteristic. Clinically, Ajagbe et al. (1985) found that a few lesions on palpation were soft and spongy like cysts, whereas many lesions were firm and bony hard, like fibro-osseous lesions.[10]

Generally, AOT occurs intraosseously, but can also occur rarely in peripheral locations. There are three variants of AOT: Follicular, extrafollicular, and peripheral. The follicular type (pericoronal) is a central intrabony lesion associated with an unerupted tooth, which accounts for about 70% of all cases. The extrafollicular type (extracoronal) is also an intraosseous lesion, but unrelated to an unerupted tooth, and represents 25% of all AOTs. The peripheral type (extra osseous) is a rare form that arises in the gingival tissue, and accounts for 5% of all AOTs.[3,5,6] All the cases involved in the present analysis were of the follicular variety.

All the variants of AOT show identical histological features.[10] The histological typing of WHO defined AOT as a tumor of odontogenic epithelium with duct-like structures and with varying degrees of inductive change in the connective tissue.[1] AOT is usually surrounded by a well-developed connective tissue capsule. It may present as a solid mass, a single large cystic space, or as numerous small cystic spaces.[1] The tumor is composed of spindle-shaped or polygonal cells forming sheets and whorled masses in a scant connective tissue stroma. The amorphous eosinophilic material is seen between the epithelial cells, as well as in the center of the rosette-like structure. The characteristic duct-like structures are lined by a single row of columnar epithelial cells, the nuclei of which are polarized away from the central lumen, as was evident in all our cases. The lumen may be empty or contain amorphous eosinophilic material.[3,5] Dystrophic calcification in varying amounts and in different forms is usually encountered in most AOTs within the lumina of the duct-like structures, scattered among epithelial masses or in the stroma. [Figures ​[Figures1f,1f, ​,2f,2f, ​,3f3f and ​and4f]4f] The immunohistochemical studies report that the slow growth, benign character, and low tendency to recur are clearly related to the low cellular proliferation observed on performing immunostaining for the Ki67 antigen.[10]

Radiographically, the intraosseous AOT has distinct features. It usually appears as a pericoronal well-circumscribed unilocular radiolucency or radiopaque-radiolucent mixed lesion with well-defined corticated or sclerotic border, usually surrounding an unerupted tooth, and may contain multiple minute variable-shaped calcifications or radiopaque foci, which may appear like a ‘cluster of small pebbles’. These calcified deposits are seen in approximately 78% of the lesions.[7,9] Rarely the lesion manifests with no radiopaque component, as seen in two of our cases.

Small calcifications within the tumor are not seen on radiographs; so the lesion is completely radiolucent and mimics a dentigerous cyst in growth pattern and appearance. However, an AOT often appears to envelop the crown as well as the root, unlike the dentigerous cyst which does not envelop roots.[3] Irregular root resorption is rarely seen, but two cases in the present analysis showed this feature distinctly.[4,5] The extraosseous AOTs are rarely detected radiographically, but slight erosion of the underlying alveolar bone cortex maybe seen.[5] Comparing the diagnostic accuracy, Dare et al. found that the intraoral periapical radiograph is the best radiograph to show radiopacities in AOT as discrete foci having a flocculent pattern within radiolucency even with minimal calcified deposits, when compared to a panoramic radiograph.[4,7,8] In addition, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is useful to distinguish AOT from other lesions.

The radiographic findings of AOT frequently resemble lesions such as dentigerous cyst, calcifying odontogenic cyst, calcifying epithelial odontogenic tumor, globulomaxillary cyst, unilocular ameloblastoma, ameloblastic fibro-odontoma, odontogenic keratocyst, and intermediate-stage odontoma.[6]

The surgical management of this tumor should be enucleation along with the associated impacted tooth and simple curettage.[7] Conservative treatment is adequate because the tumor is not locally invasive, is well encapsulated, and is separated easily from the bone. The surgical specimen may be solid or cystic. The recurrence rate is as low as 0.2%.[8,9,10] However, in exceptional cases of large tumors or risk of bone fracture, partial resection, en bloc of the mandible or maxilla has been indicated. In addition, the use of lyophilized bone and guided tissue regeneration are recommended in large osseous cavities. The prognosis is excellent in majority of the cases. The cases described here have been on regular follow-up since 12-24 months after surgery and no recurrence is noted [Figure 5].

Diagnosis

On radiographs, the adenomatoid odontogenic tumor presents as a radiolucency (dark area) around an unerupted tooth extending past the cementoenamel junction.

References

  • Zahid,Arsalan from Contemporary Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology
  • Kahn, Michael A. Basic Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology. Volume 1. 2001.
  1. More CB, Das S, Gupta S, Bhavsar K (2013). "Mandibular adenomatoid odontogenic tumor: Radiographic and pathologic correlation". J Nat Sci Biol Med. 4 (2): 457–62. doi:10.4103/0976-9668.116965. PMC 3783799. PMID 24082751.
  2. Chaves RRM, Júnior AACP, Gomes CC, de Castro WH, Gomez RS (2019). "Multiple adenomatoid odontogenic tumors in a patient with Schimmelpenning syndrome". Oral Surg Oral Med Oral Pathol Oral Radiol. doi:10.1016/j.oooo.2019.06.006. PMID 31402313.
  3. Mohanty R, Singh V, Dey AK, Behera S (2019). "A rare nonsyndromic case of adenomatoid odontogenic tumor associated with multiple impacted supernumerary teeth". Natl J Maxillofac Surg. 10 (1): 114–117. doi:10.4103/njms.NJMS_25_18. PMC 6563630 Check |pmc= value (help). PMID 31205401.
  4. Dhirawani RB, Pathak S, Mallikaarjuna K, Sharma A (2016). "An adenomatoid odontogenic tumor in disguise". J Indian Soc Pedod Prev Dent. 34 (3): 291–3. doi:10.4103/0970-4388.186752. PMID 27461816.
  5. Bravo M, White D, Miles L, Cotton R (2005). "Adenomatoid odontogenic tumor mimicking a dentigerous cyst". Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 69 (12): 1685–8. doi:10.1016/j.ijporl.2005.03.055. PMID 15996761.
  6. Sethi S, Kumar M, Aggarwal P, Indra Kumar HS, Sugandhi CD, Singh S (2016). "A case report and short review on changing trends in the site of occurrence of adenomatoid odontogenic tumor: Unravelling the past 15 years". Dent Res J (Isfahan). 13 (5): 462–471. PMC 5091007. PMID 27857774.
  7. Dwivedi D, Prabhakar N, Kasetty S, Ahuja R (2019). "Peripheral adenomatoid odontogenic tumor in a cloak of an epulis: report of a rare case". BMC Oral Health. 19 (1): 81. doi:10.1186/s12903-019-0759-8. PMC 6511215 Check |pmc= value (help). PMID 31077195.



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