An international group of epidemiologists, clinicians and pathologists with a special interest in oral white lesions and their precancerous significance has reviewed earlier work on this topic and identified some of the problems associated with previous definitions, descriptions and classifications. Modifications to these definitions, descriptions and classifications have been proposed, accompanied by explanations of the reasons for identifying the need for changes to be made. Leukoplakia may be a provisional or definitive diagnosis dependent upon the circumstances of oral examination and the availability of other information. Guidelines are provided to assist in the application of the definitions of oral leukoplakia and illustrations depict the homogeneous and non-homogeneous clinical variants. Consideration is also given to the importance of a red component in a white lesion, or a lesion that is entirely red (erythroplakia). A new clinical staging procedure for oral leukoplakia is also proposed.
OBJECTIVE: To study the effect of cessation of tobacco use on the incidence of lichen planus, leukoplakia and other oral mucosal lesions.
DESIGN: A 10–yr cohort study in a rural population of Ernakulam district, Kerala, India.
MATERIAL AND METHODS: Some 12 212 tobacco users were interviewed and examined in a basetine survey and re‐examined annually for 10 years. At each examination they were exposed to health educational programs to encourage them to quit their tobacco use. The incidence rates were calculated using person‐years method among those who stopped their tobacco use and all others.
RESULTS: A total of 77 681 person‐years of observation accrued among men and 32 544 among women. Among men 6.5% of these and among women 14.4% were in the stopped category. The incidence of oral lichen planus did not show any consistent association with cessation of tobacco habits (incidence ratio I.35) but for leukoplakia there was a substantial drop in the incidence after cessation (incidence ratio 0.3I). Several other tobacco‐associated oral mucosal lesions such as oral lichen planus‐like lesion, smoker's palate, preteukoplakia, central papillary atrophy of the tongue and leukoedema showed either zero, or very small incidence, after cessation. CONCLUSION: The reported association between tobacco use and lichen planus appears to be indirect but for all other lesions it is direct. The cessation of tobacco use led to a substantial fall in the incidence of leukoplakia and other lesions implying a reduced risk for oral cancer after cessation of tobacco use.
Incidence of oral submucous fibrosis was calculated from a 10-yr prospective intervention study of 12,212 individuals with a strong component of health education on tobacco and area nut chewing. Based on 11 new cases among 6341 chewers, the annual incidence was 8.0 per 100,000 among men and 29.0 for women. An earlier 10-yr follow-up study, with no intervention component, served as control. Based on 11 new cases among 3,809 chewers, the annual incidence was 21.3 per 100,000 for men and 45.7 for women controls. Although the decrease in the incidence in the intervention cohort was not statistically significant due to small number of cases, the results underscored the causal role of areca nut chewing and indicated the potential for primary prevention of oral submucous fibrosis.
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