| Literature DB >> 25013517 |
Jia Li1, Hongming DU1, Peng Li1, Jingkui Zhang1, Weidong Tian2, Wei Tang2.
Abstract
The diagnosis of ameloblastic carcinoma is often difficult and the optimal treatment methods remain controversial. The current study retrospectively investigated the optimal diagnosis and treatment methods of 12 ameloblastic carcinoma patients at the West China Hospital of Stomatology, Sichuan University (Chengdu, China), and 20 patients selected from the PubMed database, were reviewed. The clinical features, diagnosis and outcome of the different treatments were evaluated. Ameloblastic carcinoma occurred in 12 out of a total of 538 ameloblastoma patients; the majority were of the primary type. Of the 538 ameloblastoma patients, 294 were male, 244 were female with a male to female ratio of 1.2:1. The predilection age is 20-30 years, which accounts for 40% of the total. In total, 461 cases were in the mandible and 77 were located in the maxilla. The cure rate of the primary type and the recurrence rate of the secondary type tumors were higher in the patients from the West China Hospital of Stomatology compared with those reported in the literature. In particular, a case with a long-term survival of 30 years is presented, which is considered to be relatively rare. The evolution of the clinical course has experienced three stages: Ameloblastoma (1978) followed by metastatic ameloblastoma (2000) and finally ameloblastic carcinoma (2008). To avoid recurrence, wide local excision with postoperative radiation therapy is required. While novel therapeutic regimens should also be considered as appropriate, including carbon ion therapy and Gamma Knife stereotactic radiosurgery. However, controlled studies with larger groups of patients are required to increase the accuracy of results.Entities:
Keywords: ameloblastic carcinoma; diagnosis; radiotherapy; treatment
Year: 2014 PMID: 25013517 PMCID: PMC4081393 DOI: 10.3892/ol.2014.2230
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Lett ISSN: 1792-1074 Impact factor: 2.967
Review of 12 cases of ameloblastic carcinoma with a follow-up of >36 months from the West China Hospital of Stomatology between 2000 and 2008.
| Case, n | Gender/age, years | Type | Location | Therapy | Met. | Re. | Follow-up, months | Prognosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | M/36 | S | Mandible | Partial resection | - | Y | 120 | Re. |
| 2 | F/40 | S | Mandible | Expand resection | - | - | 120 | DF |
| 3 | M/47 | S | Maxillary | Partial resection | - | Y | 108 | Re. |
| 4 | M/61 | P | Mandible | Partial resection | - | - | 108 | DF |
| 5 | M/40 | P | Mandible | Expand resection | - | - | 96 | DF |
| 6 | F/39 | P | Mandible | Partial resection | - | - | 84 | DF |
| 7 | M/42 | P | Mandible | Expand resection | - | - | 72 | DF |
| 8 | M/46 | P | Mandible | Partial resection | - | - | 60 | DF |
| 9 | M/32 | P | Mandible | Partial resection | - | - | 60 | DF |
| 10 | M/30 | P | Mandible | Marginal ostectomy | - | - | 48 | DF |
| 11 | M/35 | P | Mandible | Partial resection | - | - | 36 | DF |
| 12 | M/75 | S | Mandible | Expand resection | Lung | - | 36 | Met. |
Met., metastasis; Re., recurrence; S, secondary type; P, pimary type; Y, yes; DF, disease free.
Review of 20 cases of ameloblastic carcinoma from an evidence-based literature review between 2005 and 2010.
| Case, n | First author (year) [ref] | Gender/ age, years | Type | Location | Therapy | Met. | Re. | Follow-up, months | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Lucca | M/69 | P | Maxillary | Jaw extended resection | - | - | 11 | DF |
| 2 | Karakida | M/43 | S | Mandible | Jaw extended resection, neck dissection | - | - | 46 | DF |
| 3 | Jindal | M/60 | S | Mandible | Jaw extended resection | - | - | 19 | DF |
| 4 | Jeremic | M/58 | P | Mandible | Jaw extended resection, neck dissection, radiation and chemotherapy following 9 months | Lung | - | 21 | DF |
| 5 | Devenney-Cakir | M/16 | P | Mandible | Partial resection, lymph node dissection | - | - | 48 | Met. (lung) |
| 6 | Yoon | M/63 | P | Maxillary | Jaw extended resection, radiation | - | Y | 13 | DF |
| F/73 | P | Maxillary | Jaw extended resection | - | - | 31 | DF | ||
| M/61 | P | Maxillary | Jaw extended resection | - | - | 13 | DF | ||
| M/46 | P | Mandible | Jaw extended resection, neck dissection, radiation | LN | Y | 18 | DF | ||
| M/58 | P | Maxillary | Jaw extended resection, neck dissection | - | - | 12 | DF | ||
| M/65 | P | Mandible | Jaw extended resection, neck dissection, radiation | LN | - | 13 | DF | ||
| 7 | Ismail | F/21 | P | Mandible | Jaw extended resection, neck dissection | - | - | 36 | DF |
| 8 | Yazici | M/10 | P | Maxillary | Jaw extended resection, radiation | - | - | 6 | DF |
| 9 | Angiero | M/68 | P | Maxillary | Jaw extended resection | - | - | 6 | DF |
| 10 | Ward | M/64 | P | Maxillary | Jaw extended resection | - | - | 42 | DF |
| 11 | Naik and Kale (2007) [ | M/70 | P | Maxillary | Partial resection | - | - | 12 | DF |
| 12 | Benlyazid | M/90 | P | Maxillary | Partial resection | - | - | 25 | STD |
| 13 | Akrish | M/80 | S | Mandible | Partial resection, neck dissection | - | - | 12 | DF |
| 14 | Suomalainen | F/21 | P | Mandible | Partial resection, neck dissection | - | - | 30 | DF |
| 15 | Miyake | F/91 | P | Mandible | Jaw extended resection | - | - | 6 | DF |
Met., metastasis; Re., recurrence; P, primary type; S, secondary type; LN, lymph node; Y, yes; DF, disease free; STD, succumbed to disease.
Figure 1Preoperative panoramic view of an ameloblastic carcinoma patient showing a low-density signal from C3 to the leading edge of the left mandibular ramus.
Figure 2Postoperative panoramic view of one patient showing a large area of bone loss in the mandible. A relatively low-density signal was observed in the C3–C6 area. The reconstruction plate is shown in place, with three loosening screws. Additionally, potential tumor involvement of the surgical margins was observed.
Figure 3Chest radiograph of one patient showing metastases in the bilateral lower lobes of the lung (black arrows).
Figure 4Clinical image of one patient demonstrating an exophytic mass on the gum of the right mandible around the C4.
Figure 5Postoperative panoramic image demonstrating bone loss between the bilateral mandibular ramus and the reconstruction plate was placed in the defect area to aid with repair.
Ameloblastic carcinoma cure rates at the West China Hospital of Stomatology and from the literature.
| Cure rate, n (%) | ||
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Variable | West China Hospital (n=12) | PubMed literature (n=20) |
| Gender | ||
| Male | 10 (80.0) | 16 (87.5) |
| Female | 2 (100.0) | 4 (100.0) |
| Type | ||
| Primary | 8 (100.0) | 17 (88.2) |
| Secondary | 4 (25.0) | 3 (100.0) |
| Therapy | ||
| Extended resection | 4 (75.0) | 15 (100.0) |
| Partial resection | 7 (71.4) | 5 (60.0) |
| Marginal ostectomy | 1 (100.0) | N/A |
| Neck dissection | N/A | 9 (88.9) |
| Primary type | N/A | 7 (85.7) |
| Secondary type | N/A | 2 (100.0) |
| No neck dissection | N/A | 11 (90.9) |
| Primary type | N/A | 10 (90.0) |
| Secondary type | N/A | 1 (100.0) |
| Radiation and chemotherapy | N/A | 5 (100.0) |
| Primary type | N/A | 5 (100.0) |
| Secondary type | N/A | N/A |
| No radiation and chemotherapy | N/A | 15 (86.7) |
| Primary type | N/A | 3 (83.3) |
| Secondary type | N/A | 3 (100.0) |
N/A, not applicable (treatment was not used in this group).