Abstract

Aims: Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis is a rare hematologic disorder usually affecting children and most commonly involving the head and neck region. Primary oro-facial manifestations are rare, and their diagnosis is often challenging as they are numerous and often resemble common pathologies, refractory to conventional medical and/or instrumental treatments. For such reasons, the diagnosis is frequently delayed, as is the following staging and therapy onset. We retrospectively studied 45 pediatric patients affected by Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis with onset in the head and neck, to examine their clinical and radiological features at the early stage. Materials and Methods: The study was a retrospective bi-institutional analysis (Department of Pediatric Dentistry and Pediatric Oncology of “Sapienza” University of Rome, Department of Interdisciplinary Medicine of the University of Bari “Aldo Moro”), which enrolled 45 patients (age range 0–18 year-old) affected by Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis with oro-facial onset. Data regarding clinical appearance, number, site, synchronous or metachronous occurrence, involved tissues/organs, radiographic features and clinical outcomes were collected, listed and overall differentiated by two age ranges (0–10-year-olds and 10–18-year-olds). Results: Patients were 26 males and 19 females, with an average age at the time of diagnosis of 4.8 ± 3.8 years (median = 3.9 years). The most common findings were inflamed, hyperplastic, painful and often ulcerated gingival lesions (22 cases), associated with deciduous tooth mobility and/or dislocation with bone loss in 18 cases, followed by nine single eosinophilic granulomas of the mandible and two of the maxilla. Lesions of the palatal mucosa were observed in six patients; nine patients showed on radiograms the characteristic “floating teeth” appearance in the mandible with synchronous lesions of the maxilla in six. Paresthesia was relatively un-frequent (three cases) and the pathological fracture of the mandible occurred in six. Head/neck lymph nodes involvement was associated with oral lesions in 12 cases and skull lesions in 14. Otitis (media or externa) was detected in four instances, exophthalmia in two, cutaneous rush in nine, contextual presence or subsequent onset of insipidus diabetes in eight. As for therapy, single or multiple small jaw lesions were all surgically removed; chemotherapy with vinblastine alone or associated with corticosteroids was the principal treatment in almost the 80% of cases; more than 50% of patients received corticosteroids, while only three patients received adjunctive radiotherapy. The overall mortality account for less than 9% (four of 45 cases) and recurrence observed in eight patients after therapy. Conclusions: Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis may mimic several oro-facial inflammatory and neoplastic diseases. Considering the potential disabling sequela following head and neck localization of Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis in children, especially at the periodontal tissues with teeth and alveolar bone loss, lesion recognition along with the histological examination of suspicious tissues is mandatory to achieve an early diagnosis and to prevent further organ involvement.

Highlights

  • Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis (LCH), previously known as Histiocytosis X, is a rare hematologic disorder usually affecting children [1,2,3]

  • Despite the conventional classification in three distinct clinical entities such as Eosinophilic Granuloma, Letterer–Siwe disease and Hand–Schüller–Christian disease, LCH is currently classified according to the treatment recommendations of the Histiocyte

  • The eosinophilic granuloma, being an unifocal disease, is considered an System LCH (SS-LCH) as involving a single site; the Hand–Schüller–Christian disease is a multifocal SS-LCH because it occurs in multiple sites of a single organ system, while the Letterer–Siwe disease is a multifocal Multi-System LCH (MS-LCH) as it involves multiple sites in more than one organ

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Summary

Introduction

Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis (LCH), previously known as Histiocytosis X, is a rare hematologic disorder usually affecting children [1,2,3]. LCH is characterized by an abnormal proliferation of bone-marrow derived histocytes (dendritic cells resembling Langerhans cells of the epidermis) that may infiltrate and damage single or multiple organs and tissues, especially the bones [1,4,5]. For such reasons, despite the conventional classification in three distinct clinical entities such as Eosinophilic Granuloma, Letterer–Siwe disease and Hand–Schüller–Christian disease, LCH is currently classified according to the treatment recommendations of the Histiocyte. LCH affects fewer than five people per million with a rate of 0.2 to 0.5 cases per

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