Presence of B Cells and Plasma Cells in Oral Lichen Planus

Statement of the Problem: Oral lichen planus (OLP) is a chronic inflammatory disease with unknown etiopathogenesis. It was believed that T cells played the major role in developing the lesions. It has been recently suggested that B lymphocyte cells (B cells) and plasma cells may play a role in OLP p...

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Main Authors: Nazanin Mahdavi, Pouyan Aminishakib, Nika Soltani
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Shiraz University of Medical Sciences 2020-09-01
Series:Journal of Dentistry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dentjods.sums.ac.ir/article_46207_2515b38ec65599ae6239f2967d0edc3b.pdf
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spelling doaj-17cbcde3fcbd4749b2ccdeef5a897ecb2020-11-25T03:40:09ZengShiraz University of Medical SciencesJournal of Dentistry2345-64852345-64182020-09-0121320921410.30476/DENTJODS.2020.81804.0Presence of B Cells and Plasma Cells in Oral Lichen PlanusNazanin Mahdavi 0Pouyan Aminishakib 1Nika Soltani 2Dept. of Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology, School of Dentistry, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, IranDept. of Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology, School of Dentistry, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, IranPostgraduate Student, Dept. of Endodontics, Faculty of Dentistry, Tehran Medical Science Islamic Azad University, Tehran, Iran.Statement of the Problem: Oral lichen planus (OLP) is a chronic inflammatory disease with unknown etiopathogenesis. It was believed that T cells played the major role in developing the lesions. It has been recently suggested that B lymphocyte cells (B cells) and plasma cells may play a role in OLP pathogenesis. Purpose: OLP is considered as a T-cell mediated disease. It was believed that the presence of B cells and plasma cells in the sub-epithelial inflammatory infiltrate, rules out the diagnosis of OLP. This study aims to investigate the presence of B cells and plasma cells in the inflammatory infiltrate of OLP. In addition, the association between the presence of B cells and plasma cells with histopathologic features of the lesion was assessed. Materials and Method: To assess the presence of B cells and plasma cells, 61 cases with the diagnosis of OLP were collected. The cases with definite clinical and histopathological diagnosis of lichen planus based on WHO criteria were included. For each case, demographic information and histological characteristics were recorded. Specimens underwent immunohistochemical (IHC) staining for CD20 and CD138 and the percentage of the positive cells were counted and scored. Results: CD20 positive cells existed in all OLP cases with the mean expression of 22.5%± 15.17% and small number of CD138 positive cells were seen in 62.3% of our cases with the mean expression of 4.74%±9.23%. No association was found between histopathological features and CD138 expression, however, CD20 expression level was higher in the cases with parakeratinized surface (p= 0.004). Conclusion: B cells existed in the inflammatory infiltrate of OLP in all cases. Small number of plasma cells could be occasionally found in OLP. Therefore, presence of B cells and plasma cells in the inflammatory infiltrate cannot rule out the diagnosis of OLP. https://dentjods.sums.ac.ir/article_46207_2515b38ec65599ae6239f2967d0edc3b.pdfb cell; plasma cell; oral lichen planus; pathogenesis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nazanin Mahdavi
Pouyan Aminishakib
Nika Soltani
spellingShingle Nazanin Mahdavi
Pouyan Aminishakib
Nika Soltani
Presence of B Cells and Plasma Cells in Oral Lichen Planus
Journal of Dentistry
b cell; plasma cell; oral lichen planus; pathogenesis
author_facet Nazanin Mahdavi
Pouyan Aminishakib
Nika Soltani
author_sort Nazanin Mahdavi
title Presence of B Cells and Plasma Cells in Oral Lichen Planus
title_short Presence of B Cells and Plasma Cells in Oral Lichen Planus
title_full Presence of B Cells and Plasma Cells in Oral Lichen Planus
title_fullStr Presence of B Cells and Plasma Cells in Oral Lichen Planus
title_full_unstemmed Presence of B Cells and Plasma Cells in Oral Lichen Planus
title_sort presence of b cells and plasma cells in oral lichen planus
publisher Shiraz University of Medical Sciences
series Journal of Dentistry
issn 2345-6485
2345-6418
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Statement of the Problem: Oral lichen planus (OLP) is a chronic inflammatory disease with unknown etiopathogenesis. It was believed that T cells played the major role in developing the lesions. It has been recently suggested that B lymphocyte cells (B cells) and plasma cells may play a role in OLP pathogenesis. Purpose: OLP is considered as a T-cell mediated disease. It was believed that the presence of B cells and plasma cells in the sub-epithelial inflammatory infiltrate, rules out the diagnosis of OLP. This study aims to investigate the presence of B cells and plasma cells in the inflammatory infiltrate of OLP. In addition, the association between the presence of B cells and plasma cells with histopathologic features of the lesion was assessed. Materials and Method: To assess the presence of B cells and plasma cells, 61 cases with the diagnosis of OLP were collected. The cases with definite clinical and histopathological diagnosis of lichen planus based on WHO criteria were included. For each case, demographic information and histological characteristics were recorded. Specimens underwent immunohistochemical (IHC) staining for CD20 and CD138 and the percentage of the positive cells were counted and scored. Results: CD20 positive cells existed in all OLP cases with the mean expression of 22.5%± 15.17% and small number of CD138 positive cells were seen in 62.3% of our cases with the mean expression of 4.74%±9.23%. No association was found between histopathological features and CD138 expression, however, CD20 expression level was higher in the cases with parakeratinized surface (p= 0.004). Conclusion: B cells existed in the inflammatory infiltrate of OLP in all cases. Small number of plasma cells could be occasionally found in OLP. Therefore, presence of B cells and plasma cells in the inflammatory infiltrate cannot rule out the diagnosis of OLP.
topic b cell; plasma cell; oral lichen planus; pathogenesis
url https://dentjods.sums.ac.ir/article_46207_2515b38ec65599ae6239f2967d0edc3b.pdf
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