The genetic basis of oral leukoplakia and its key role in understanding oral carcinogenesis.
Letícia Martins GuimarãesMarina Gonçalves DinizSílvia Regina RogattoHélder Antônio Rebelo PontesCarolina Cavaliéri GomesPublished in: Journal of oral pathology & medicine : official publication of the International Association of Oral Pathologists and the American Academy of Oral Pathology (2020)
Oral leukoplakia (OL) is the most common oral potentially malignant disorder, with a global prevalence of 2%-3%, variable malignant transformation rate and incompletely understood aetiology. Considering the subjectivity in oral dysplasia grading, other evaluation methods have been tested as predictors of malignant transformation. DNA ploidy status and loss of heterozygosity signatures have been shown to be good predictive markers of malignant transformation. However, effective markers to predict which lesions will progress to invasive carcinoma and by which mechanisms remain unclear. Recent evidence suggests that dysplasia progression to carcinoma occurs through neutral clonal evolution (i.e. randomly). We focus on the genetic basis of OL, encompassing the gross chromosomal alterations and single-gene mutations, and discuss such alterations in the context of aetiology, clinical presentation and progression. The deeper we understand the genetic basis of OL, the more we approach a better comprehension of the complex and poorly understood process of oral carcinogenesis.