Sign up & Download
Sign in

International collaborative study on ghost cell odontogenic tumours: calcifying cystic odontogenic tumour, dentinogenic ghost cell tumour and ghost cell odontogenic carcinoma.

by Constantino Ledesma-Montes, Robert J Gorlin, Mervyn Shear, Finn Prae Torius, Adalberto Mosqueda-Taylor, Mario Altini, Krishnan Unni, Oslei Paes De Almeida, Román Carlos-Bregni, Elías Romero De León, Vince Phillips, Wilson Delgado-Azañero, Abelardo Meneses-García show all authors
Journal of oral pathology medicine official publication of the International Association of Oral Pathologists and the American Academy of Oral Pathology ()

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Calcifying odontogenic cyst was described first by Gorlin et al. in 1962; since then several hundreds of cases had been reported. In 1981, Praetorius et al. proposed a widely used classification. Afterwards, several authors proposed different classifications and discussed its neoplastic potential. The 2005 WHO Classification of Odontogenic Tumours re-named this entity as calcifying cystic odontogenic tumour (CCOT) and defined the clinico-pathological features of the ghost cell odontogenic tumours, the CCOT, the dentinogenic ghost cell tumour (DGCT) and the ghost cell odontogenic carcinoma (GCOC). METHODS: The aim of this paper was to review the clinical-pathological features of 122 CCOT, DGCT and GCOC cases retrieved from the files of the oral pathology laboratories from 14 institutions in Mexico, South Africa, Denmark, the USA, Brazil, Guatemala and Peru. It attempts to clarify and to group the clinico-pathological features of the analysed cases and to propose an objective, comprehensive and useful classification under the 2005 WHO classification guidelines. RESULTS: CCOT cases were divided into four sub-types: (i) simple cystic; (ii) odontoma associated; (iii) ameloblastomatous proliferating; and (iv) CCOT associated with benign odontogenic tumours other than odontomas. DGCT was separated into a central aggressive DGCT and a peripheral non-aggressive counterpart. For GCOC, three variants were identified. The first reported cases of a recurrent peripheral CCOT and a multiple synchronous, CCOT are included. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that ghost cell odontogenic tumours comprise a heterogeneous group of neoplasms which need further studies to define more precisely their biological behaviour.

Cite this document (BETA)

Available from www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Page 1
hidden
Page 2
hidden

Readership Statistics

3 Readers on Mendeley
by Discipline
 
 
by Academic Status
 
33% Lecturer
 
33% Ph.D. Student
 
33% Assistant Professor
by Country
 
67% Japan
 
33% Nigeria

Sign up today - FREE

Mendeley saves you time finding and organizing research. Learn more

  • All your research in one place
  • Add and import papers easily
  • Access it anywhere, anytime

Start using Mendeley in seconds!

Already have an account? Sign in