Oral mucosal wart - Oral Mucosal Lesion
Synopsis

Different HPV types have markedly different oncogenic potentials. High-risk HPV types include HPV-16, -18, -31, -33, and -45. Infections with HPV-6 and -11 are frequently detected in oral mucosal warts and occur commonly in benign or low-grade intraepithelial neoplasms but are very rarely associated with the development of malignancies.
Condyloma acuminata are caused by HPV-6, -11, -16, and -18.
Verruca vulgaris is associated with HPV types 2 and 4. In HIV-infected and other immunocompromised individuals, oral warts are frequently detected and may contain unusual HPV types, such as HPV-7, -71, -72, and -73.
Bowenoid papulosis has been reported in the mouth. Bowenoid papulosis may be considered as a transitional state between condyloma acuminatum (similar clinically) and Bowen disease (squamous cell carcinoma in situ) (similar histologically). Careful observation for recurrence and for the possibility of invasive or in situ malignancy is warranted.
A subtype of oral warts is Heck disease, also known as focal epithelial hyperplasia, which consists of multiple (or, rarely, single) smooth, white-to-pink papules found on the tongue, lips, palate, and floor of the mouth as well as the gingival, buccal, and labial mucosa. It is relatively common in children of South American Indian, Greenlander Eskimo, or South African descent. The lesions may clear spontaneously. It is strongly associated with HPV-13 and -32.
Related topic: genital wart
Codes
B07.8 – Other viral warts
SNOMEDCT:
402908003 – Oral wart
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Last Updated:08/10/2022