Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery
Volume 64, Issue 9 , Pages 1343-1352, September 2006

Relative Frequency of Central Odontogenic Tumors: A Study of 1,088 Cases from Northern California and Comparison to Studies from Other Parts of the World

  • Amos Buchner, DMD, MSD

      Affiliations

    • Professor and Chairman, Department of Oral Pathology and Oral Medicine, The Maurice and Gabriela Goldschleger School of Dental Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel.
    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress correspondence and reprint requests to Dr Buchner: Department of Oral Pathology, and Oral Medicine, School of Dental Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel
  • ,
  • Phillip W. Merrell, DDS

      Affiliations

    • Associate Professor, Department of Pathology and Medicine, School of Dentistry, University of the Pacific, San Francisco, CA.
  • ,
  • William M. Carpenter, DDS, MS

      Affiliations

    • Professor and Chairman, Department of Pathology and Medicine, School of Dentistry, University of the Pacific, San Francisco, CA.

Purpose

To determine the relative frequency of central odontogenic tumors in relation to all biopsy specimens and to one another in an oral pathology biopsy service and to compare the data with previous studies from different parts of the world.

Methods

Files from the Pacific Oral Pathology Laboratory of the University of the Pacific, San Francisco, CA served as a source of material for this study. Files were systematically searched for all cases of central (intraosseous) odontogenic tumors during a 20-year period.

Results

Central odontogenic tumors were identified in 1,088 (1.2%) cases out of the 91,178 accessed. Individually, of all odontogenic tumors, 75.9% were odontomas. The prevalence of the remaining tumors appears to be a rare occurrence. The second most common was ameloblastoma (11.7%), followed by odontogenic myxoma (2.2%). Odontomas are considered hamartomas or developmental anomalies. When excluded from the list of individual odontogenic tumors, ameloblastoma is the most common (48.5%), followed by odontogenic myxoma (9.2%), adenomatoid odontogenic tumor (7.3%), ameloblastic fibro-odontoma (7.3%), ameloblastic fibroma (6.5%), calcifying odontogenic cyst (6.5%), and odontogenic fibroma (6.1%). Each remaining tumor comprises less than 4%.

Conclusions

Studies related to the relative frequency of individual odontogenic tumors from different parts of the world are difficult to compare because most studies are outdated, the list of tumors is limited, and new entities are not included. To determine the real relative frequency, further studies should be conducted, especially in Western societies, by experienced pathologists in the field of odontogenic tumors.

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 The study was supported by the Ed and Herb Stein Chair in Oral Pathology, Tel Aviv University, Israel.

PII: S0278-2391(06)00672-0

doi:10.1016/j.joms.2006.05.019

Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery
Volume 64, Issue 9 , Pages 1343-1352, September 2006