AMELOBLASTOMA (ICD CODE 9310/0)
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It is an ondontogenic tumor which is slow growing, locally invasive neoplasm which has tendency to recur
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Age– can occur at any age but rare in children and more common in 3rd to 7th decades of life
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Sex – equal in both sexes
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Site –
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Common site is mandible (85% of cases), usually at molar ascending ramus area. Next common site is maxilla (15% of cases), at the posterior region
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Other sites – soft tissue of retromolar area and posterior gingiva,
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Rare sites – Temporal bone, infratemporal fossa, middle ear, sinonasal tract
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Origin – Odontogenic epithelium and from remnants of dental lamina in gingiva ( rests of Serres)
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Clinical presentation –
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Usually asymptomatic or may presents as painless swelling with slow growth
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If the tumor is large, patient may have malocclusion or may have facial deformity
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Radiography – presents as multilocular radiolucent lesion with cortical expansion
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Microscopy –
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Different histological patterns are seen. They are
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Follicular pattern
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Nests of epithelium resembling enamel organ of developing teeth, which are dispersed in fibrous stroma
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core of the nest show loosely arranged angular cells that resemble the stellate reticulum
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Central core is surrounded by single layer of tall columnar ameloblast like cells
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Nuclei shows reverse polarity and they are placed away from the basement membrane
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Cytoplasm shows subnuclear vacuolation
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Squamoid differentiation can also be present
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Cysts formation may be present which may vary from small microcysts to large macrocysts
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Plexiform type of ameloblastoma
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Anastomosing cords or large sheets of odontogenic stellate epithelium bound by ameloblastic cells with similar stellate reticulum like core.
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In this variant reverse polarity may not be seen in some case
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Other rare variants are
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Basal cell variant – stellate reticulum cells are replaced by basaloid cells
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Granular cell variant – stellate reticulum cells have eosinophilic granular cytoplasm
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Acanthomatous variant – stellate reticulum cells have keratinization and squamous metaplasia
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Desmoplastic variant – increased fibrous stroma with compressed epithelial islands
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Cystic ameloblastoma may have columnar cells with reversed polarity and cytoplasmic vacuolation lining the cystic cavity
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Immunohistochemistry
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Tumor cells are positive for – CK5, CK14, CK19, CD 56, p63, p40, BRAF V600E, Beta catenin, Calretinin, FOXP1
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Treatment
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Surgical resection with margins resection 1cm past the radiographic level of tumor because the actual margin of tumor usually extends beyond the radiographic or clinical margin
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It has high recurrence rate usually upto 15%
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Reference
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David E. Spence and Samir K. E I.Mofty. Tumors and cysts of the jaws. In: the Washington manual of Surgical Pathology. Second edition. By: Peter A. Humphrey, Louis P. Dehner, John D. Pfeiffer