4.6 Article

Lichenoid dysplasia is not a distinct pathological entity

Journal

ORAL ONCOLOGY
Volume 119, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.oraloncology.2021.105362

Keywords

Oral lichenoid dysplasia; Oral lichen planus; Oral epithelial dysplasia; Oral leukoplakia; Transcriptomic profiling; Diagnostic biomarkers; Immunophenotyping; Malignant transformation; Oral cancer

Funding

  1. Australian Dental Research Foundation
  2. Australian Centre for Oral Oncology Research Education
  3. Colgate Oral Care
  4. Queensland Government Smart Futures Co-Investment Fund
  5. Western Australia Dental Foundation
  6. Cancer Australia

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The study found that Oral Lichenoid Dysplasia (OLD) shares molecular and immunophenotypic similarities with Oral Lichen Planus (OLP) and is distinct from Oral Epithelial Dysplasia (OED). It is recommended that OLD not be considered a distinct pathological entity, and dysplasia should be excluded in the diagnosis of OLP.
Objectives: Oral Lichenoid Dysplasia (OLD) is a controversial histological term applied to lesions that display features of oral lichen planus (OLP) and oral epithelial dysplasia (OED). In this study we investigated the molecular profiles of OLD, OLP and OED to determine whether OLD exists as a distinct pathological entity. Materials and Methods: Samples from patients presenting with lesions diagnosed histologically as OLP, OLD or OED underwent RNA sequencing followed by differential gene expression, functional enrichment and network analysis, sparse partial least squares discriminant analysis, and immune cell phenotypic estimation. Results: Unsupervised clustering demonstrated a group of genes with high expression in OLP and OLD, and low expression in OED, predominantly involved in inflammatory processes. Many genes were significantly differentially expressed between either OLD or OLP and OED, but few between OLD and OLP. Functional enrichment showed significant pathways and ontologies related to inflammatory signalling and immune response between OLD or OLP and OED. Broad commonality was found between OLP and OLD in upregulation of specific immune system pathways. Classifying models discriminated histologically diagnosed OLD from OED based upon molecular data alone. Bioinformatic profiling showed that immune cell populations in OLP and OLD were consistent, and distinct from OED. Conclusion: Molecular data shows that OLD is not a distinct pathological entity. Its transcriptomic and immunophenotypic profile is similar to OLP and distinct from OED. We recommend that oral lichenoid dysplasia not be used as a distinct pathological entity. Our data further supports exclusion of dysplasia in diagnosis of OLP.

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