# Bilateral Lesions Are Linked to Postoperative Regrowth in Craniofacial Fibrous Dysplasia: Alkaline Phosphatase as a Marker of Clinical Phenotype

**Authors:** Jiang Xue, Longping Liu, Jianyun Zhang, Yue Lou, Lisha Sun, Tiejun Li

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics16030472 · Diagnostics · 2026-02-03

## TL;DR

High preoperative alkaline phosphatase levels and bilateral lesions are linked to younger age and higher regrowth risk in craniofacial fibrous dysplasia.

## Contribution

This study identifies bilateral lesions as a strong predictor of postoperative regrowth in fibrous dysplasia, independent of alkaline phosphatase levels.

## Key findings

- Bilateral lesions were strongly associated with postoperative regrowth (83.3% vs. 21.5%).
- Preoperative ALP levels correlated with younger surgical age, earlier onset, and polyostotic subtype.

## Abstract

Objectives: This study aimed to evaluate phenotypic associations between preoperative alkaline phosphatase (ALP) levels and clinical characteristics, and explore clinical factors associated for postoperative regrowth in craniofacial fibrous dysplasia. Methods: In this retrospective cohort (2003–2024), 71 surgically treated fibrous dysplasia patients were analyzed. Relationships between preoperative ALP (using age-stratified reference ranges) and key phenotypes (age at surgery, onset age, laterality, lesion type) were assessed via nonparametric tests. Associations with postoperative regrowth were assessed using Mann–Whitney U or Kruskal–Wallis tests for non-normally distributed continuous variables and χ2 or Fisher’s exact tests for categorical variables. Results: Preoperative ALP levels significantly correlated with younger surgical age (16–19 vs. ≥19 years: 244.0 vs. 107.0 U/L, p < 0.001), earlier onset (0–16 vs. >16 years: 114.0 vs. 83.0 U/L, p = 0.030), bilateral lesions (176.0 vs. 106.2 U/L, p = 0.006), and polyostotic subtype (polyostotic fibrous dysplasia vs. monostotic fibrous dysplasia: 162.0 vs. 87.5 U/L, p < 0.001). However, neither ALP levels (p = 0.061) nor abnormal ALP rates (p = 0.090) predicted regrowth. Crucially, bilateral lesions were significantly associated with regrowth (83.3% (5/6) vs. 21.5% (14/65); p = 0.005). The overall regrowth rate was 8.5% (6/71). Conclusions: Bilateral lesions demonstrate significant association with postoperative regrowth risk, potentially guiding surveillance intensity. ALP correlates with phenotypic burden but shows limited prognostic utility. These findings, interpreted considering retrospective constraints, warrant validation in larger cohorts.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** fibrous dysplasia (MONDO:0000845), polyostotic fibrous dysplasia (MONDO:0008274), monostotic fibrous dysplasia (MONDO:0019665)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** ALPP (alkaline phosphatase, placental) [NCBI Gene 250] {aka ALP, PALP, PLAP, PLAP-1}
- **Diseases:** Craniofacial Fibrous Dysplasia (MESH:D000077275), polyostotic fibrous dysplasia (MESH:D005359), fibrous dysplasia (MESH:D005357), monostotic fibrous dysplasia (MESH:D005358)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

27 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12897224/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12897224