LEUCOPLAKIA (PRECANCEROUS LESION)

THE RISK OF ORAL CANCER

LEUCOPLAKIA (PRECANCEROUS LESION) IS THE MOST COMMON POTENTIALLY MALIGNANT DISORDER OF THE ORAL CAVITY, CHARACTERIZED BY PERSISTENT WHITE PATCHES THAT CANNOT BE RUBBED OFF AND CANNOT BE CLASSIFIED AS ANY OTHER DEFINABLE LESION. THE WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION (WHO) DESCRIBES LEUCOPLAKIA (PRECANCEROUS LESION) AS “A WHITE PLAQUE OF QUESTIONABLE RISK HAVING EXCLUDED OTHER KNOWN DISEASES OR DISORDERS THAT CARRY NO INCREASED RISK FOR CANCER.”

THIS INNOCUOUS-LOOKING LESION IS ANYTHING BUT HARMLESS. OFTEN PAINLESS, FREQUENTLY IGNORED, AND TRAGICALLY MISUNDERSTOOD, LEUCOPLAKIA (PRECANCEROUS LESION) CAN REPRESENT THE SILENT TRANSITION FROM A HEALTHY MOUTH TO ORAL SQUAMOUS CELL CARCINOMA (OSCC), A DEVASTATING AND LIFE-THREATENING FORM OF CANCER.

 

DEFINING LEUCOPLAKIA (PRECANCEROUS LESION): A SILENT PRECURSOR

 LEUCOPLAKIA (PRECANCEROUS LESION) IS CONSIDERED A “POTENTIALLY MALIGNANT DISORDER” DUE TO ITS STRONG ASSOCIATION WITH DYSPLASIA AND CARCINOMA DEVELOPMENT. THE WHO COLLABORATIVE CENTRE FOR ORAL CANCER DEFINES IT AS:

“A PREDOMINANTLY WHITE LESION OF THE ORAL MUCOSA THAT CANNOT BE CHARACTERIZED CLINICALLY OR PATHOLOGICALLY AS ANY OTHER DEFINABLE LESION.”

THIS DEFINITION IS EXCLUSIVE—MEANT TO ELIMINATE BENIGN, INFLAMMATORY, OR INFECTIOUS WHITE LESIONS SUCH AS LICHEN PLANUS, CANDIDIASIS, FRICTIONAL KERATOSIS, OR CHEMICAL BURNS.

ETIOLOGY: WHAT CAUSES LEUCOPLAKIA (PRECANCEROUS LESION)?

 

SEVERAL RISK FACTORS CONTRIBUTE TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF ORAL LEUCOPLAKIA (PRECANCEROUS LESION), WITH THE MOST PROMINENT BEING:

  • TOBACCO (SMOKED AND SMOKELESS) – MOST CASES ARE LINKED TO TOBACCO CONSUMPTION, WHICH CAUSES EPITHELIAL HYPERPLASIA, KERATINIZATION, AND DYSPLASTIC CHANGE.
  • ALCOHOL – ACTS SYNERGISTICALLY WITH TOBACCO TO DAMAGE MUCOSAL CELLS AND REDUCE IMMUNE SURVEILLANCE.
  • CHRONIC IRRITATION – FRICTION FROM DENTURES, SHARP TEETH, OR HABITUAL CHEEK BITING.
  • HUMAN PAPILLOMAVIRUS (HPV) – ESPECIALLY HPV 16 AND 18 SUBTYPES.
  • NUTRITIONAL DEFICIENCIES – VITAMIN A, FOLATE, AND IRON DEFICIENCY.

 

CLINICAL FEATURES & CLASSIFICATION

LEUCOPLAKIA (PRECANCEROUS LESION) MANIFESTS IN VARIOUS CLINICAL FORMS:

  • HOMOGENEOUS LEUCOPLAKIA (PRECANCEROUS LESION) – FLAT, THIN, UNIFORMLY WHITE LESIONS WITH SMOOTH OR WRINKLED SURFACES.
  • NON-HOMOGENEOUS LEUCOPLAKIA (PRECANCEROUS LESION) – MIXED RED AND WHITE PATCHES (ERYTHROLEUKOPLAKIA), NODULAR OR VERRUCOUS.

 

RISK OF PROGRESSION TO ORAL CANCER

ESTIMATES VARY, BUT THE MALIGNANT TRANSFORMATION RATE OF ORAL LEUCOPLAKIA (PRECANCEROUS LESION) RANGES FROM 2% TO 3%, DEPENDING ON:

  • SITE (FLOOR OF MOUTH, TONGUE ARE HIGH RISK)
  • SIZE (>200 MM^2)
  • CLINICAL TYPE (NON-HOMOGENEOUS OR HOMOGENEOUS)
  • PRESENCE AND SEVERITY OF DYSPLASIA

 

LEUCOPLAKIA (PRECANCEROUS LESION) MAY SEEM LIKE A HARMLESS WHITE PATCH—BUT ITS DANGER LIES IN ITS SILENCE. AS A PRECURSOR TO ONE OF THE MOST AGGRESSIVE CANCERS IN THE WORLD.

 

REFERENCES:

THROUGH EARLY DETECTION, PROPER SUPPLEMENTATION, AND AWARENESS OF MOLECULAR PROGRESSION, WE MAY TURN THIS SILENT KILLER INTO A PREVENTABLE FOOTNOTE IN THE STORY OF CANCER. 

LEUCOPLAKIA

(PRECANCEROUS LESION)

CAN BE DEADLY!

WHAT CAN BE DONE?

 WHITE PATCHES IN YOUR MOUTH MIGHT SEEM HARMLESS—BUT THEY COULD BE LEUCOPLAKIA (PRECANCEROUS LESION), A KNOWN PRECURSOR TO ORAL CANCER. OFTEN PAINLESS, FREQUENTLY IGNORED, AND DANGEROUSLY UNDERESTIMATED, IT SILENTLY PROGRESSES UNTIL IT’S TOO LATE.

danger-sign-with-skull-and-crossbones-warning-symbol-in-red-and-black-vector-removebg-preview

ORAL LEUCOPLAKIA (PRECANCEROUS LESION) DEMANDS RESPECT, VIGILANCE, AND ACTION.

Scroll to Top