by Jason Wasserman MD PhD FRCPC
May 4, 2026
An odontoma is a noncancerous growth that develops within the bones of the jaw and is made up of the same tissues that form a normal tooth — enamel, dentin, cementum, and sometimes pulp. It is the most common type of odontogenic tumor (a tumor arising from tooth-related tissues), making up roughly one in five of all odontogenic tumors. Odontomas are most often discovered in children and teenagers, particularly when a permanent tooth fails to erupt through the gum on schedule, and a dental X-ray is taken to determine why.
Odontomas are classified as hamartomas rather than true tumors. A hamartoma is a growth made up of normal tissues that have grown in a disorganized way in a place where they belong, rather than tissue that has begun to behave abnormally. This distinction matters because hamartomas grow only to their natural size, do not spread, and are reliably cured by simple removal.
This article will help you understand the findings in your pathology report — what each term means and why it matters for your care.
The cause of most odontomas is not known. They are not linked to anything the patient or parents did or did not do, and they are not contagious. Several theories have been proposed to explain why they form, including local injury to the tooth bud (the early structure that develops into a tooth) during childhood, infection, and possibly genetic factors that affect tooth development. In most patients, an odontoma develops as an isolated finding with no associated medical condition.
A small number of patients with multiple odontomas — especially complex odontomas appearing alongside other unusual features — may have an inherited condition called Gardner syndrome, which is described later in this article.
The current World Health Organization classification recognizes two main types of odontoma. They look different under the microscope and on dental X-rays, but behave the same way and are treated the same way.
Some odontomas show features of both types and are called combined or mixed odontomas. The treatment is the same regardless of which type is found.
Most odontomas cause no symptoms and are discovered by chance on a dental X-ray taken for another reason — most often to investigate a tooth that has not come through the gum on schedule. When symptoms do occur, they tend to be mild and slow to develop:
The diagnosis is made after a tissue sample is examined under the microscope by a pathologist. An odontoma is usually first suspected on a dental X-ray, panoramic X-ray, or cone-beam CT, which shows a well-defined white (radiopaque) area within the jawbone, surrounded by a thin dark (radiolucent) halo. The radiopaque appearance is what distinguishes an odontoma from most other jaw lesions, including odontogenic cysts, which appear dark on X-ray. A compound odontoma often shows multiple small tooth-shaped structures on imaging, whereas a complex odontoma appears as an irregular calcified mass. Imaging alone is often suggestive but cannot make the diagnosis with certainty, since other calcified lesions of the jaw can look similar. The odontoma is removed by an oral and maxillofacial surgeon, usually together with any associated unerupted tooth that cannot be saved, and sent to the laboratory.
Under the microscope, the pathologist looks for the dental tissues that make up an odontoma — enamel matrix (or empty spaces left where enamel was, since enamel often dissolves during tissue processing), dentin, cementum, and sometimes pulp tissue. In a compound odontoma, these tissues are organized into recognizable miniature tooth structures with a normal arrangement: enamel on the outside of a crown, dentin underneath, and cementum on the root surface. In a complex odontoma, the same tissues are present but arranged in a haphazard pattern with no recognizable tooth shape. Surrounding the lesion is a thin fibrous capsule, which represents what would normally have been the dental follicle of a developing tooth. Once the diagnosis is confirmed, no further imaging or testing is usually needed.
Most patients with an odontoma have a single isolated lesion and no associated medical condition. However, the discovery of multiple odontomas — particularly when accompanied by other unusual findings such as extra (supernumerary) teeth, bony growths called osteomas, skin cysts, or a family history of colon polyps — should prompt evaluation for Gardner syndrome. Gardner syndrome is a variant of familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP), an inherited condition caused by a mutation in the APC gene. People with FAP develop hundreds to thousands of polyps in the colon and rectum starting in adolescence, and have an extremely high lifetime risk of colon cancer if the colon is not removed. The dental and bony findings of Gardner syndrome can appear before the colon polyps and are sometimes the first clue to the diagnosis. For this reason, when multiple odontomas are identified, referral to a medical geneticist or genetic counselor is recommended. Confirming the diagnosis allows the patient to begin colon cancer screening at the appropriate age and allows family members to be tested.
A single isolated odontoma in a patient with no other features and no family history is not a sign of Gardner syndrome and does not by itself require genetic evaluation.
The outlook for an odontoma is excellent. It is benign, does not turn into cancer, and grows only until it reaches its mature size — usually during the years that the surrounding teeth are still developing. Once the odontoma is removed, recurrence is essentially never seen. The only situation that requires longer-term attention is a patient with multiple odontomas who is later diagnosed with Gardner syndrome, in which case follow-up is directed at the colon and the other features of the condition rather than at the original odontoma.
Treatment is led by an oral and maxillofacial surgeon, often working with a general dentist or pediatric dentist, and (when an unerupted permanent tooth is involved) with an orthodontist.
Follow-up X-rays are typically taken at 6 and 12 months to confirm that the bone is healing and that any preserved tooth is moving into the right position. Long-term follow-up beyond that is usually not needed for an isolated odontoma.