AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study aims to compare demographic data, recurrence rates, metastasis occurrences, and survival prognoses of ameloblastic carcinoma (AC) and metastasizing ameloblastoma (MA) using existing literature and diagnostics.
  • - A total of 77 publications were reviewed, revealing that both tumors commonly appear in the mandible, but have differing profiles in terms of patient sex and age; however, survival rates between the two were similar despite MA patients living longer post-metastasis.
  • - It was found that conservative treatments lead to more recurrences, particularly in MA patients, and that AC patients have a poorer prognosis compared to MA when metastasis occurs, indicating that conservative therapies should be avoided for both.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To investigate and compare the demographic data, occurrence of recurrence and metastasis, and survival prognosis between ameloblastic carcinoma (AC) and metastasizing ameloblastoma (MA), based on appropriate and currently accepted eligible diagnostic criteria, in a systematic review of the literature.

Methods: An electronic search was undertaken, last updated in December 2021. Eligibility criteria included publications having enough clinicopathological information to confirm the diagnosis of these tumors.

Results: Seventy-seven publications reporting 85 ACs and 43 MAs were included. Both tumors were more frequent in mandible and showed different clinical profiles regarding patients' sex and age. There was no difference in the estimated cumulative survival between patients diagnosed with these tumors. Metastases mainly affected the lungs, followed by cervical lymph nodes. The mean time between the first metastasis and the last follow-up was higher for MA (p = 0.021). In addition, MA patients remained alive longer than AC patients after the first metastasis diagnosis (p = 0.041). Considering only the cases that metastasized, a higher ratio of AC patients died in comparison to MA patients (p = 0.003). The occurrence of recurrence was associated with a conservative primary treatment with both AC (p < 0.001) and MA tumors (p = 0.017). Multiple recurrent events were associated with conservative primary therapies with MA (p < 0.001) but not with AC (p = 0.121).

Conclusion: In addition to some demographic differences, ACs that metastasize present a worse prognosis than MA. As conservative procedures are associated with multiple recurrent events, this treatment modality should be avoided for both tumors.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9544829PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jop.13334DOI Listing

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