DermNet provides Google Translate, a free machine translation service. Note that this may not provide an exact translation in all languages

Translate

Oral hairy leukoplakia pathology

Author: Assoc Prof Patrick Emanuel, Dermatopathologist, Auckland, New Zealand, 2013.


toc-icon
Table of contents
arrow-right-small

Oral hairy leukoplakia is caused by Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection of the oral mucosa. It most often occurs in association with HIV infection. It has been less frequently described in immunosuppressed patients, especially following organ transplantation, and is rare in immune competent individuals.

Histology of oral hairy leukoplakia

In oral hairy leukoplakia, the mucosa displays mild papillary acanthosis (figure 1). Hyperkeratosis and marked parakeratosis of the superficial epithelial layer is a prominent feature (figure 2). Superficial infections of the hyperkeratinized epithelium with bacteria or Candida may also be seen. The acanthosis is caused by ballooning koilocyte-like cells. (Figures 1, 3). The nuclei of these have a homogenous ground-glass appearance and may contain intranuclear inclusions.

Oral hairy leukoplakia pathology

Special studies for oral hairy leukoplakia

Diagnosis requires demonstration of EBV DNA, RNA, or protein within the epithelial cells of the lesion. In-situ hybridisation for EBV is usually performed for confirmation of the diagnosis.

Differential diagnosis of oral hairy leukoplakia

Oral candidiasis: Oral hairy leukoplakia is often colonised by candida which can obfuscate the pathology

Human papillomavirus (HPV): The koilocyte-like cells in oral hairy leukoplakia resemble HPV infection. In-situ hybridisation for EBV distinguishes these entities.

 

References

  • Alessi E, Berti E, Cusini M, et al. Oral hairy leukoplakia. J Am Acad Dermatol. Jan 1990;22(1):79–86. PubMed
  • Lopez-Pintor R, Hernandez G, de Arriba L, de Andres A. Comparison of oral lesion prevalence in renal transplant patients under immunosuppressive therapy and healthy controls. Oral Dis. 2010;16(1):89–95. PubMed

On DermNet

Books about skin diseases

 

Related information

Sign up to the newsletter