The clinical characteristics of benign oral mucosal tumors
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Allon, Irit; Kaplan, Ilana; Gal, Gavriel; Chaushu, Gavriel; Allon, Dror M.
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Aquest document és un/a article, creat/da en: 2014
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Objectives: To investigate the clinical characteristics and pre-biopsy provisional diagnoses of benign oral mucosal
tumors.
Material and
Methods: A 10- year retrospective analysis of all benign tumors of the oral mucosa, from a univer-
Methods: A 10- year retrospective analysis of all benign tumors of the oral mucosa, from a univer
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sity- affiliated oral and maxillofacial surgery department.
Results: 146 benign tumors were included. The mean age was 49.6 years, with an approximately equal gender dis
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tribution. The most prevalent tumor types were lipomatous tumors (27.4%), vascular (23.3%), and salivary gland
tumors (16.5%). Tongue, labial and buccal mucosa were the most frequently involved sites. The vast majority
(98.6%) presented as non-ulcerated masses. Only 2 (1.4%) presented as ulcerated masses. The clinical provisional
diagnosis correctly classified lesions as non-malignant in 93.3%. In only 9 (6.7%) suspicion of malignancy was in
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cluded in the provisional diagnosis. However, benign neoplasia was unsuspected in 42.1% of tumors. These cases
were clinically classified as reactive.
Conclusions: Benign tumors were most likely to be clinically correctly classified as non-malignant, but even in the
setting of experienced oral surgeons, neoplasia was unsuspected in more than 40% of cases. This data strongly
supports the need to biopsy every oral mucosal mass, since inaccurate clinical evaluation of the lesion's biological
nature was a frequent event.
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