INTRODUCTION
Langerhans-cell histiocytosis (LCH) is an infrequent disease. Its pathogenesis is unknown but may be a dysregulation of the immune response as a result of inappropriate stimulation of the immune system or a myeloid neoplasm. It has been associated to a mutation of the gene BRAF 600 E and activation of ERK 1-3 . In 50 % to 90 % of the cases diagnosed, patients are between less than one year old to 15 years old 4 , with an estimated annual incidence of 2 to 10 cases per million children 5 .
LCH is characterized by the abnormal accumulation and proliferation of histiocytes, eosinophiles and pathological Langerhans cells, and may involve one or múltiple tissues and systems. The cell infiltrate destroys the affected tissues 6 .
In contrast to usual skin cells, pathological Langerhans cells appear round, functionally and immunologically immature, surrounded by eosinophiles, macrophages, lymphocytes, and sometimes giant multinucleate cells 5 . Diagnosis is performed by biopsy of the lesion to ascertain presence of Birbeck granules, and immunohistochemical confirmation by the markers CD1a, S100 or CD207. CD1a is specific to and distinctive of Langerhans cells 7 .
Clinical manifestations include asymptomatic lesions, single lesions that remit, or multisystem disorders 8 . Bone lesions have been reported in 82% of patients with LCH. Lesions were generally associated to painful swelling, which could be the most frequent initial sign. The bones in which LCH was most frequently found were skull (27%), mandible and maxilla (11%), and the long bones femur (13%), humerus (5%) and tibia (3%) 9 . In the oral cavity, there may be lytic bone lesions in one or several areas, pathological mandibular fractures, pain, sores, periodontal involvement with marked tooth mobility, early tooth eruption, or mobility and premature loss of primary or permanent teeth 10-12 . According to the organs involved, the disease is grouped into three subtypes:
Single-system (SS LCH): a single organ or tissue is involved.
Multisystem with risk organs involved (MS LCH RO+): Risk organs include liver, bone marrow, and any involved in the central nervous system such as skull and face bones (orbit, malar or maxillary bone). These lesions may extend to the soft intracranial tissue and are often associated with diabetes insipidus.
Multisystem without risk organs involved (MS LCH RO-): Lesions are located on skin, bone or lymph nodes 13 .
New LCH lesions at the same site as was previously affected or at a different site from the original one is called reactivations. Their seriousness may be the same as or different from the initial lesion, and they may occur in the oral cavity 14, 15 .
There is no report in the literature on the grouping of lesions, association with age, or LCH subtypes. The aims of this study are therefore to group lesions according to the tissue involved (bone, bone-mucosa and mucosa), determine the frequency of oral lesions in pediatric patients with LCH, and relate them to age and the different subtypes of the disease.
MATERIALS AND METHOD
This study evaluated 95 patients with confirmed LCH diagnosis who were referred from different hospitals to the Department of Comprehensive Pediatric Dentistry at the School of Dentistry at Buenos Aires University (FOUBA).
Inclusion criteria were newborn to 16-year-old children with LCH diagnosis confirmed by pathohistological study, by presence of Birbeck granules and positive immunological makers CD1a and S100 or CD207 in cells from the lesion. Exclusion criterion was patients with non-Langerhans histiocytosis.
The following information was recorded in each patient’s clinical history: personal data, medical and family background, including date of diagnosis and status of the disease (activity or remission). Informed consent was obtained and the procedures to be followed were explained to patients. This study was approved by the FOUBA Ethics Committee (CETICA N°006/2019), in keeping with the principles in the Declaration of Helsinki.
Diagnosis and location of oral lesions: Each patient underwent extraoral and intraoral clinical diagnosis. Panoramic radiographs were taken to detect any osteolytic lesions of the jaws and the degree of dental involvement in patients whose age and cooperation so allowed. Periodical radiographs were taken in cases where radiolucency or tooth mobility was observed. Axial or volumetric CT scans were requested to ascertain lesión size and extensión towards surrounding tissues.
Oral lesions were grouped according to affected tissue as follows: 1) bone lesions; 2) mucosa! lesions, and 3) bone-mucosal lesions.
When oral lesions were present, biopsies were taken and the tissue sent to the Surgical Pathology Laboratory at the Department of Pathological Anatomy, FOUBA.
RESULTS
The sample consisted of 95 patients, 56.84% male, average age at time of consultation with dentist 5.4 ± 3.7 years, average age at diagnosis of the disease 2.7 ± 2.9 years, while average ages at diagnosis for the different subtypes SS LCH, MS-RO+ LCH and MS-RO- LCH were 4.06, 0.6 and 1.42 years, respectively; (p < 0.001). Table 1 shows the distribution of patients according to disease subtypes and whether oral lesions were present. In the group with oral lesions, 35.0 % had SS LCH, 7.5 % had MS-RO+ LCH, and 57.5 % had MS-RO- LCH (p <0.001).
Patients with LCH (n=95) | ||||||
LCH Subtype | Without oral lesions (n = 55)
57.8% CI 47.3 – 67.9 |
With oral lesions (n = 40)
42.2% CI 32.0- 52.7 |
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N | % | CI 95% | N | % | CI 95% | |
SS LCH | 30 | 54.5 | 40.7 - 67.8 | 14 | 35 | 20.5 – 51.7 |
MS-RO+ LCH | 3 | 5.5 | 1.4 - 16.1 | 3 | 7,5 | 1.5 – 20.4 |
MS-RO- LCH | 22 | 40 | 27.3 - 54.1 | 23 | 57.5 | 40.8-72.9 |
Oral lesions were present in 42.1% of the patients:
Bone lesions: Closed osteolytic lesions within mandibular or maxillary bone that do not involve the oral mucosa. These lesions may produce facial swelling or pain (Figs. 1A and B).
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Mucosal lesions: Pericoronitis in first permanent molars. During permanent tooth eruption there may be inflammation and pain in the marginal gum (Fig. 1C) with presence of a surrounding reddish halo. Pericoronitis persists until the tooth is fully erupted.
3) Bone-mucosal lesions: Extensive lesions involving both jaws and compromising alveolar processes. Teeth lacking bone support present severe mobility, pain, pathological root resorption and/or exposed cement. These conditions may lead to spontaneous tooth loss. The osteolytic alveolar bone lesion may induce primary or permanent tooth eruption earlier than the normal sequence, without adequate crown calcification or with little root formation. Radiographs show radiolucent areas surrounding affected teeth (Figs. 1F and 1G).
Table 2 shows that, regarding lesions, 52.5 % were in bone tissue, 40 % in bone-mucosal tissues, and 7.5 % involved only mucosal tissues (p = 0.002). Table 3 shows children’s average age at the time of LCH diagnosis according to the oral tissue involved (p=0.212).
Lesion type | N | % | CI 95 | SS LCH | MS RO+ LCH | MS RO- LCH |
Bone | 21 | 52.5 | 36.0-68.5 | 13 | 2 | 6 |
Bone and mucosal | 16 | 40 | 24.8-56.7 | 1 | 1 | 14 |
Mucosal | 3 | 7.5 | 1.5-20.4 | 0 | 0 | 3 |
Total | 40 | 42.1 | 32.0-52.7 |
Bone and bone-mucosal lesions were found in lower jaw, followed by upper jaw. Mucosa of the palate, lip and jugal zone were less frequently affected.
Oral lesion was the first LCH manifestation detected in 14.73% of patients. Table 4 shows the oral tissues involved. The most frequent was bone tissue, with 85.8 % (p= 0.008). Within this group, 85.71 % of patients had SS LCH and 14.29 % had MS-RO-LCH. No initial lesions of the disease were recorded in the mouths of MS-RO+ LCH patients (p = 0.008). Table 5 shows that in 10.52 % oftotal patients (n=10), oral lesion was the only manifestation of LCH, with bone tissue involvement in 90 %, bone-mucosal in 10 %, and mucosal alone in none (p = 0.011).
DISCUSSION
LCH has a broad range of systemic manifestations according to the tissue or organ involved. The current study surveyed and grouped oral lesions in pediatric LCH patients. The results agree with other studies that report that oral lesions may be the first manifestations of LCH, and that the oral cavity is often the only site involved 16-22 . Oral lesions may also be reactivations of the disease. Sigala et al. (1972) 23 studied 50 cases of LCH in which 36 % of the patients presented oral lesions, and 16 % corresponded to the first manifestation of LCH.
In the current study, 40 out of the total 95 patients (42.1 %) presented LCH lesions in the oral cavity. In 10.52 %, they were the only lesions, while in others, they were part of a broader systemic process. Most lesions involved the lower jaw, in agreement with Pippa Vallejo (2016) 10 regarding lytic bone lesions present in the ascending branch and posterior portion of the mandibular body, which may be single or multiple.
According to Nakamura 24 , the loss of alveolar bone produces gingival retraction, destruction of keratinized gum, periodontal pockets, swelling and pain, and facilitates early ectopic eruption of permanent molars. In children younger than one year of age, primary teeth erupt prematurely and there is possible loss of permanent tooth buds 21 . In the current study, in patients whose first histiocytosis lesion was in the oral cavity, it involved bone tissue in 85.8%, and bone-mucosa in 14.2%, while mucosa alone was not involved as first LCH lesion.
Rios 25 and Erdem 20 report that the radiographic image looks like a periodontal cyst, apical granuloma, localized form of periodontitis, or even a neoplastic process, so it is essential to conduct a pathohistological study. When osteolysis involves the alveolar process, the loss of supporting bone tissue leaves the tooth “floating” within the lesion produced by LCH. In some cases, the gum accompanied the bone resorption with loss of insertion level and consequent exposure of the root 10 . Lytic lesions observed radiographically in the alveolar bone had a flat base and rounded walls, as if shaped by a hole puncher 26 . Milán reports that LCH lesions in oral mucosa are ovoid, erythematous, painful upon palpation, and located mainly at the bottom of the vestibular sulcus and jugal mucosa 27 . LCH oral lesions are not considered high-risk; nevertheless, when they occur on the alveolar processes of the maxilla, they may invade the orbit, malar, or maxillary sinus, and access the base of the skull, with possible risk to the central nervous system 14 . Patients with lesions in the upper jaw therefore have different prognosis and treatment 13 . In the current study, oral lesions in the single-system subtype involved bone exclusively, while in the multisystem subtypes, they were varied, involving bone, or mucosa, or both.
When the only evidence of LCH was in the oral zone (edema, teeth with mobility, or pain unrelated to changing teeth), the disease was diagnosed by a pediatric dentist.
At the time of birth, the jaws hold 20 primary teeth soon to erupt, and 28 permanent teeth in formation. Any alteration in the jawbones may produce sequels in both dentition sets. Age of diagnosis differs according to the different presentation types of the disease. In the current study, children aged 0 to 2 years presented bone-mucosal lesions and corresponded to the multisystem type (MS-RO+ LCH and MS-RO-LCH), while in children older than 2 years, the most frequent lesions were bone or mucosal. Preliasco et al. 28 agree that younger children would be at higher risk when the oral cavity is involved.
CONCLUSIONS
The oral lesions observed in 40 children differed in extension, and in clinical and radiographic appearance. The aim of this study was therefore to group them based on the type of tissue involved in the lesion. The tissues affected were bone, oral mucosa, or both. A high frequency of oral lesions was observed, which may be one of the first manifestations of the disease, with bone lesions being the most frequent.
Patients with bone-mucosal lesions, with multisystem LCH with or without risk organ involvement were the youngest at the time of diagnosis. No evidence was found of LCH subtype influencing the likelihood of developing oral manifestations.
Lesions on the maxilla may spread to the central nervous system. Thus, pediatric patients with oral involvement, and according to their systemic situation, may have different prognosis and need to receive different courses of treatment.
These results show that interdisciplinary work from the beginning of the disease may improve LCH patient wellbeing. Pediatricians and pediatric dentists should check the oral cavity thoroughly to identify any clinical or radiographic manifestations of LCH. If the pediatric dentist is the first to see a child with LCH lesion confirmed by biopsy, they must immediately confer with an oncologist in order to locate any other systemic lesions that might be present. It is recommendable to take panoramic radiographs periodically to monitor evolution or diagnose any new lesions.