| Literature DB >> 36013570 |
Elena Cristina Andrei1, Ileana Monica Baniță1, Maria Cristina Munteanu2, Cristina Jana Busuioc3, Garofița Olivia Mateescu3, Ramona Denise Mălin4, Cătălina Gabriela Pisoschi5.
Abstract
Oral papilloma lesions may appear as a result of HPV infection, or not, and only special molecular methods could differentiate them. Low-risk and high-risk HPV types could induce oral HPV papillomatosis with different natural evolution, clearance and persistence mechanisms. The pathogenic mechanisms are based on the crosstalk between the oral epithelial and immune cells and this very efficient virus. HPV acts as a direct inducer in the process of transforming a benign lesion into a malignant one, the cancerization process being also debated in this paper. According to the degree of malignity, three types of papillomatous lesions can be described in the oral cavity: benign lesions, potential malign disorders and malignant lesions. The precise molecular diagnostic is important to identify the presence of various virus types and also the virus products responsible for its oncogenicity. An accurate diagnostic of oral papilloma can be established through a good knowledge of etiological and epidemiological factors, clinical examination and laboratory tests. This review intends to update the pathogenic mechanisms driving the macroscopic and histological features of oral papillomatosis having HPV infection as the main etiological factor, focusing on its interreference in the local immunity. In the absence of an accurate molecular diagnostic and knowledge of local immunological conditions, the therapeutic strategy could be difficult to decide.Entities:
Keywords: HPV immunity; HPV oncogenicity; HPV-related oral lesions; oral HPV infection; oral papilloma
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36013570 PMCID: PMC9415166 DOI: 10.3390/medicina58081103
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.948
Figure 1Schematic illustration of a high-risk HPV morphology.
Figure 2The roles of high-risk HPV main gene products. E1-L2—HPV genes; Kc-Keratinocyte; HSPGs—heparan sulfate proteoglycans.
Figure 3The central role of infected Kcs in suppressing the immune response. (see details in the text below).
Figure 4HPV-negative oral papilloma (a,b) and HPV-positive papilloma (c,d). (a) Macroscopically, tumor lesion located at the jugal mucosa, round shape, size 0.75 mm, pinkish-whitish color, poorly vascularized, non-bleeding; (b) Histological aspect of jugal mucosa; acanthosis, parakeratosis and koilocytes presence in the epithelium, (trichrome stain × 200); (c) Macroscopically, tumor lesion located at the occlusal line of the jugal mucosa, round-oval shape, size 0.95 mm, red color, richly vascularized, bleeding at the slightest trauma; (d) Hiper- and parakeratosis, acanthosis and koilocytes presence in the epithelium; in the basal epithelial layer mitotic figures are present. Proinflammatory cells infiltrate the mucosa (trichrome stain × 400).