Central odontogenic fibroma: an international multicentric study of 62 cases
Fecha
2021-05Autor
Roza, Ana Luiza Oliveira Correa
Sousa, Emanuel Mendes
Leite, Amanda Almeida
Amaral-Silva, Gleyson Kleber
Morais, Thayna Melo de Lima
Wagner, Vivian Petersen
Schuch, Lauren Frenzel
Vasconcelos, Ana Carolina Uchoa
de Arruda, Jose Alcides Almeida
Mesquita, Ricardo Alves
Fonseca, Felipe Paiva
Abrahao, Aline Correa
Agostini, Michelle
de Andrade, Bruno Augusto Benevenuto
da Silveira, Ericka Janine Dantas
Martinez-Flores, René
Martinez Rondanelli, Benjamin [Mayor Univ, Dept Oral Pathol & Oral Med, Fac Dent, Chile]
Alberdi-Navarro, Javier
Robinson, Liam
Marin, Constanza
Assuncao Junior, Jose Narciso Rosa
Valiati, Renato
Rodrigues Fregnani, Eduardo
(Santos-Silva, Alan Roger
Lopes, Marcio Ajudarte
Hunter, Keith D.
Khurram, Syed Ali
Speight, Paul M.
Mosqueda-Taylor, Adalberto
van Heerden, Willie F. P.
Carlos, Roman
Wright, John M.
de Almeida, Oslei Paes
Romanach, Mario José
Vargas, Pablo Agustin
Ubicación geográfica
Notas
HERRAMIENTAS
Resumen
Objective. The aim of this study was to report the clinicopathologic features of 62 cases of central odontogenic fibroma (COdF). Study Design. Clinical and radiographic data were collected from the records of 13 oral pathology laboratories. All cases were microscopically reviewed, considering the current World Health Organization classification of tumors and were classified according to histopathologic features. Results. There were 43 females and 19 males (average age 33.9 years; range 8-63 years). Clinically, COdF lesions appeared as asymptomatic swellings, occurring similarly in the maxilla (n = 33) and the mandible (n = 29); 9 cases exhibited palatal depression. Imaging revealed well-defined, interradicular unilocular (n = 27), and multilocular (n = 12) radiolucencies, with displacement of contiguous teeth (55%) and root resorption (46.4%). Microscopically, classic features of epithelial-rich (n = 33), amyloid (n = 10), associated giant cell lesion (n = 7), ossifying (n = 6), epithelial-poor (n = 3), and granular cell (n = 3) variants were seen. Langerhans cells were highlighted by CD1a staining in 17 cases. Most patients underwent conservative surgical treatments, with 1 patient experiencing recurrence. Conclusions. To the best of our knowledge, this study represents the largest clinicopathologic study of COdF. Most cases appeared as locally aggressive lesions located in tooth-bearing areas in middle-aged women. Inactive-appearing odontogenic epithelium is usually observed within a fibrous/fibromyxoid stroma, occasionally exhibiting amyloid deposits, multinucleated giant cells, or granular cells.
URI
http://repositorio.umayor.cl/xmlui/handle/sibum/8530https://www.oooojournal.net/article/S2212-4403(20)31171-8/fulltext
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.oooo.2020.08.022
https://researchers.unab.cl/es/publications/central-odontogenic-fibroma-an-international-multicentric-study-o
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