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1.
Using PCR, the overall prevalence of human papillomavirus (HPV) DNA in penile carcinoma is about 40–45%, which is similar to the detection rate of HPV-DNA in vulvar carcinoma (50%). In analogy to vulvar cancer two different pathways of penile carcinogenesis seem to exist. In contrast to basaloid and warty penile cancers which are regularly HPV-associated (about 80–100%), only a part of keratinizing and verrucous penile carcinomas appear to be related with HPV (33–35%). Penile intraepithelial neoplasias comprising Bowen's disease, erythroplasia of Queyrat and bowenoid papulosis are precursor lesions of basaloid and warty carcinomas of the penis.Precursors of keratinizing carcinomas and verrucous carcinomas are not established. Whether lichen sclerosus and squamous-cell hyperplasia precede penile keratinizing carcinoma is a matter of discussion. Giant condylomata acuminata may precede the development of verrucous carcinomas in some cases. Since high risk HPVs are more frequently found in verrucous carcinomas than in giant condylomas, HPV typing may be a helpful diagnostic step to differentiate giant condyloma from verrucous carcinoma.  相似文献   

2.
Human papillomavirus (HPV) has been previously demonstrated in male genital neoplasms using Southern blot hybridization (SBH) and in situ hybridization with radiolabeled probes (ISH-R). In this study we used in situ hybridization with biotinylated DNA viral probes (ISH-B), a technique that can be applied to routinely collected and processed tissue. Thirty cases of exophytic penile condyloma acuminatum and nine cases of invasive squamous cell carcinoma of the penis were examined for the presence of HPV using ISH-B for HPV types 6, 11, 16, 18, 31, and 33. HPV DNA was found in 25 of 30 (83%) penile condylomas; HPV type 6 in 13 (43%); and HPV type 11 in 12 (40%). Slight cross-reactivity between HPV types 6 and 11 was noted. None of the condyloma cases was positive for HPV types 16, 18, 31, or 33. One of the nine patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the penis was positive for HPV 16. In situ hybridization with biotinylated DNA viral probes is a highly sensitive method for detecting and localizing HPV in penile condylomas. This method, however, may not be as sensitive as SBH for detecting HPV in invasive penile squamous cell carcinomas.  相似文献   

3.
AIMS--To determine retrospectively the prevalence of human papillomavirus (HPV) types 16 and 18 in penile carcinomas. METHODS--Forty one surgically resected penile carcinomas from the archives at Queen Mary Hospital, Hong Kong, were reviewed and classified into verrucous carcinoma, and well, moderately, and poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinomas. Paraffin wax embedded tumour tissue was sectioned and analysed for HPV 16 and HPV 18 using the polymerase chain reaction with type specific internal probes. RESULTS--There were seven verrucous carcinomas, and 11 well, 17 moderately, and six poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinomas. Six of the 41 (15%) patients had penile carcinoma containing HPV 16 or HPV 18 DNA, or both, with HPV 16 found in four (10%) and HPV 18 in four (10%). The mean ages of HPV positive and HPV negative groups of patients were 68.5 and 57.6 years, respectively (p < 0.05). None of the seven verrucous and 11 well differentiated squamous cell carcinomas was positive for HPV. The mean age of patients who had these carcinomas was 52.4 years. As a group, these low grade carcinomas occurred in patients younger by more than a decade than those who had carcinomas of the higher grades (mean age 64.4 years; p < 0.01). CONCLUSIONS--Penile carcinomas had much lower rates of infection by HPV 16 or HPV 18 than cervical carcinomas in this Hong Kong population. Based on our findings and on data collated from published findings, it is concluded that penile verrucous carcinomas are not associated with HPV 16 and HPV 18. The overall low prevalence of HPV 16 and HPV 18 in penile carcinomas suggests that other HPV types might be important in the pathogenesis of these tumours.  相似文献   

4.
The relationship of various verruciform squamous cell proliferations of the penis such as verrucous carcinoma, with or without anaplasia and giant condyloma, is uncertain. We conducted clinicopathologic, flow cytometric, and HPV typing studies on 15 cases of penile verrucous carcinoma to investigate its place in the spectrum of genital squamous proliferations. The results show a high degree of morphologic uniformity with respect to Ackerman's original diagnostic criteria, as well as to several other histopathologic features evaluated. The latter include polygonal squamous cells with glassy cytoplasm, centrally located vesicular nuclei, intercellular edema, well-formed cellular bridges, and absence or paucity of koilocytes, true fibrovascular cores, and keratohyalin granules. Intraepithelial abscesses and crust-formation were present in many cases. Four cases contained microscopic foci of cellular anaplasia. These hybrid verrucous-squamous carcinomas presented and behaved similarly to the pure verrucous carcinomas. Tumor recurrence was correlated with extent of initial surgical management. DNA ploidy analysis by flow cytometry performed on eight pure and two hybrid tumors showed uniform diploid populations with similar G1/G2 fractions in both groups. Eight pure and two hybrid tumors evaluated for HPV by isotopic in situ hybridization were uniformly negative for HPV types 6, 11, 16, 18, and 31. The results show that penile verrucous carcinoma demonstrates characteristic and uniform morphologic features and does not contain the HPV types typically associated with condyloma acuminatum, giant condyloma of Buschke-L?wenstein, and condylomatous carcinoma.  相似文献   

5.
Urethral and penile tissues and their neoplasms are considered anatomically and pathogenetically different. Since we observed urethral dysplastic lesions and some similarities between noninvasive and invasive lesions of the anterior urethra and glans, we designed this study to document epithelial urethral abnormalities in patients with penile squamous cell carcinoma. We examined urethral epithelia from 170 penectomies with invasive squamous cell carcinoma finding a variety of primary epithelial abnormalities in 89 cases (52%) and secondary invasion of penile carcinoma to urethra in 42 cases (25%). Patients' average age was 68 years. Primary tumors measured 4 cm in average diameter and the majority were squamous cell carcinoma of the usual (67%) or verrucous type (15%). Primary epithelial abnormalities found were squamous intraepithelial lesions, metaplasias and microglandular hyperplasias. Urethral squamous intraepithelial lesions of high grade was found in six patients and of low grade in eight cases. Squamous metaplasia, seen in 69 cases, was the most frequent finding. Metaplasias were classified as nonkeratinizing and keratinizing. Nonkeratinizing metaplasias (57 cases) were variegated in morphology: simplex (26 cases), hyperplastic (12 cases), clear cell (11 cases) and spindle (8 cases). Keratinizing metaplasias (12 cases) showed hyperkeratosis and were more frequently associated with verrucous than nonverrucous penile squamous cell carcinoma. Microglandular hyperplasia was present in eight cases. Lichen sclerosus was associated with simplex squamous metaplasia in four cases. Despite the large size of the primary tumors, direct urethral invasion by penile carcinoma was present in only 25% of the cases. The presence of precancerous lesions in urethra of patients with penile carcinoma indicates urethral participation in the pathogenesis of penile cancer. Simplex squamous metaplasia is a common finding probably related to chronic inflammation. Keratinizing and hyperplastic squamous metaplasias may be important in the pathogenesis of special types of penile carcinomas such as verrucous carcinoma.  相似文献   

6.
The incidence of penile cancer varies from country to country, with the highest figures reported for countries in Africa, South America, and Asia and lowest in the United States and Europe. Causes of this variation are not clear, but they are thought to be related to human papillomavirus infection, smoking, lack of circumcision, chronic inflammation, and poor genital hygiene. Most penile tumors are squamous cell carcinomas, and a variegated spectrum of distinct morphologies is currently recognized. Each one of these subtypes has distinctive pathologic and clinical features. About half of penile carcinomas are usual squamous cell carcinomas, and the rest corresponds to verrucous, warty, basaloid, warty-basaloid, papillary, pseudohyperplastic, pseudoglandular, adenosquamous, sarcomatoid, and cuniculatum carcinomas. Previous studies have found a consistent association of tumor cell morphology and human papillomavirus presence in penile carcinomas. Those tumors composed of small- to intermediate-sized, basaloid ("blue") cells are often human papillomavirus positive, whereas human papillomavirus prevalence is lower in tumors showing large, keratinizing, maturing eosinophilic ("pink") cells. Human papillomavirus-related tumors affect younger patients, whereas human papillomavirus-unrelated tumors are seen in older patients with phimosis, lichen sclerosus, or squamous hyperplasia. This morphologic distinctiveness is also observed in penile intraepithelial neoplasia. The specific aim of this review is to provide a detailed discussion on the macroscopic and microscopic features of all major subtypes of penile cancer. We also discuss the role of pathologic features in the prognosis of penile cancer, the characteristics of penile precursor lesions, and the use of immunohistochemistry for the diagnosis of invasive and precursor lesions.  相似文献   

7.
Anal squamous cell carcinoma and its precursor lesions are increasing in incidence in the United States and Europe. This trend predates human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immune deficiency syndrome and has been associated with persistent high-risk human papilloma virus (HPV) genotype infection, previous lower genital tract dysplasia/carcinoma, high frequency anoreceptive intercourse, heavy cigarette smoking, immunosuppression in solid organ transplant and immune disorders, and human immunodeficiency virus seropositivity. Screening protocols for at-risk patients are under active investigation and pathologists are often asked to assess anal canal and perianal biopsies for the presence of dysplasia and/or invasive carcinoma. Because underdiagnosis and overdiagnosis of anal cancer and precancer may lead to inappropriate treatment, it is important for the pathologist to be aware of current screening strategies, specific risk lesions, and the role of pathology in initial diagnosis and evaluation of anal biopsy and/or resection specimens. Standardized histologic criteria and uniform terminology should be used for reporting all anal canal and perianal squamous intraepithelial lesions. HPV subtyping, anal cytology, and recently identified biomarkers, such as p16 and Becton Dickinson ProEx C may provide additional information in problematic cases, but it is important to be aware of the limitations of these assays. HPV has been linked to all the major histologic subtypes of anal carcinoma (eg, basaloid, cloacogenic, transitional, etc.) and this association is strongest for anal canal lesions. With the possible exception of the microcystic pattern, histologic subtype does not seem to predict prognosis; and anal squamous cell carcinomas should be classified as either keratinizing or nonkeratinizing. Poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinomas have a worse prognosis and should be distinguished from poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma, melanoma, and neuroendocrine tumors. Very well differentiated squamous cell carcinoma with pushing margins (so-called giant condyloma of Buschke and Lowenstein) should be classified as verrucous carcinoma; this tumor shows aggressive local infiltration but does not metastasize. As all anal condylomata may harbor foci of high-grade dysplasia or invasive carcinoma, careful sectioning and complete histologic examination is required.  相似文献   

8.
HPV DNA in intraepithelial neoplasia and carcinoma of the vulva and penis.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Surgical specimens of 15 patients with early and 12 patients with advanced squamous cell carcinoma of the vulva and the penis were examined for the presence of human papillomavirus (HPV) type 6, 11, 16, and 18 DNA by Southern blotting (SB) and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis. By SB, HPV type 16 DNA was detected in all early carcinomas and 2 of 12 cases of advanced squamous cell carcinoma (ISCC) of the vulva and penis. PCR revealed HPV DNA in four additional cases of vulvar and penile ISCC negative by SB. Three cases contained HPV16 and one HPV18. Two cases of vulvar and penile Buschke-L?wenstein (BL) tumor with malignancy and one case of vulvar verrucous carcinoma were also examined by both techniques. While BL tumors were associated with DNA of HPV6 or 11, no HPV association was found for verrucous carcinoma. Our results confirm that the detection rate of HPV DNA in early vulvar and penile carcinomas is much higher than in invasive carcinomas. In addition, we have shown that in the lower genital tract, 50% of cases of ISCC are HPV16 correlated. The absence of HPV DNA (types 6, 11, 16, and 18) in the remaining 50% of cases of ISCC thus suggests that vulvar and penile ISCC may have more than one pathogenetic pathway.  相似文献   

9.
The prevalence of human papilloma virus (HPV) DNA in different histological subtypes of cervical adenocarcinoma and related tumors was examined using formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue samples from 105 primary cervical adenocarcinomas and adenosquamous carcinomas. Broad-spectrum HPV DNA amplification and genotyping was performed with the SPF10 primer set and line probe assay (LiPA), respectively. HPV DNA was detected in 82 of 90 (91%) mucinous adenocarcinomas, encompassing endocervical, intestinal, and endometrioid histological subtypes, and in nine of nine adenosquamous tumors (100%). HPV DNA was not detected in any nonmucinous adenocarcinomas including clear cell, serous, and mesonephric carcinomas (0/6). The most common viral types detected in adenocarcinoma were HPV 16 (50%) and HPV 18 (40%), followed by HPV 45 (10%), HPV52 (2%), and HPV 35 (1%). Multiple HPV types were detected in 9.7% of the cases. In conclusion, mucinous adenocarcinomas and adenosquamous carcinomas of the cervix demonstrate a very high prevalence of HPV DNA, similar to that reported for cervical squamous cell carcinoma. Only rare histological variants of cervical adenocarcinoma seem unrelated to HPV infection.  相似文献   

10.
Two independent pathways of vulvar carcinogenesis have currently been identified, one related to infection with mucosal human papillomaviruses (HPVs) and a second related to chronic inflammatory or autoimmune processes. The goal of the study was to examine a possible role of cutaneous HPVs from the beta genus in vulvar carcinogenesis and to evaluate the distribution of intratypic variants of HPV 16 in HPV 16-positive vulvar cancer. Consecutive cases of vulvar carcinoma were retrieved from the files and included the following histologic subtypes: keratinizing (n=21), basaloid (n=7), warty (n=1), mixed basaloid-warty (n=4), verrucous (n=4), keratoacanthoma (n=1), basal cell carcinoma (n=1). All tumors were microdissected and tested for 25 beta HPV types and 25 mucosal HPV types. Cases identified as positive for HPV 16 were further tested for intratypic variants. All cases were immunostained for p16INK4a. Beta HPVs were not detected in any of the tumor cases. Mucosal HPVs were detected in all but one basaloid/warty carcinomas; of these, nine cases (82%) were positive for HPV 16, including five European subtypes, one African subtype, one North American subtype and two indeterminate subtypes. Two of four verrucous carcinomas were positive for HPV 6. Mucosal HPVs were not detected in keratinizing carcinomas, keratoacanthoma and basal cell carcinoma. All cases of basaloid/warty carcinomas, but none of the remaining tumors, overexpressed p16INK4a protein. Our data do not support a role of beta HPVs in the pathogenesis of vulvar carcinoma. The study reaffirms the role of mucosal HPVs, in particular that of HPV 16, in the pathogenesis of basaloid and warty tumor subtypes. The HPV 16 intratypic variation showed correlation with patients' ethnic background. P16INK4a immunostaining seems to be a sensitive and specific marker of vulvar carcinomas positive for oncogenic mucosal HPVs.  相似文献   

11.
Stankiewicz E, Prowse D M, Ktori E, Cuzick J, Ambroisine L, Zhang X, Kudahetti S, Watkin N, Corbishley C & Berney D M
(2011) Histopathology 58 , 433–439
The retinoblastoma protein/p16 INK4A pathway but not p53 is disrupted by human papillomavirus in penile squamous cell carcinoma Aims: The pathogenesis of penile squamous cell carcinoma (PSCC) is not well understood. Human papillomavirus (HPV) may be involved in carcinogenesis, but few studies have compared cell‐cycle protein expression in HPV positive and negative cancers. The aim was to determine the extent of HPV infection in different histological subtypes of PSCC and its impact on the expression of key cell‐cycle proteins: p53, p21, p16INK4A and retinoblastoma (RB) protein. Methods and results: One hundred and forty‐eight PSCC samples were examined immunohistochemically for RB, p16INK4A, p53 and p21 protein expression. One hundred and two cases were typed for HPV by PCR. HPV DNA was detected in 56% of tumours, with HPV16 present in 81%. Basaloid tumours were related strongly to HPV infection (10 of 13), while verrucous were not (three of 13). Fifty‐nine per cent (38 of 64) of usual type SCCs had HPV infection. RB protein correlated negatively (P < 0.0001) and p16INK4A (P < 0.0001) and p21 (P = 0.0002) correlated positively with HPV infection. p53 did not correlate with HPV infection. Conclusions: HPV infection is present in more than half of penile cancers and it is responsible for RB pathway disruption. However, no link between HPV and p53 immunodetection was found. Only basaloid and half of usual‐type PSSCs correlate with HPV infection, confirming possible separate aetiologies for those tumours.  相似文献   

12.
13.
We devised a scoring system, "HPV score", for histological diagnosis of human papillomavirus (HPV) infection in dysplasia of the uterine cervix. Four hundred and sixty cases of cervical dysplasia were screened for the presence of HPV infection using this system, and 116 cases (25%) were judged to be HPV infection. The results showed good correlation with those obtained using the immunoperoxidase (IMPO) method, but 42 of the 116 cases (36%) were negative for HPV antigen by the IMPO method. Severe stromal inflammation was noted in about half of such cases. Among the four histological types of cervical condyloma, the flat type was most common among the cases with HPV infection judged according to HPV score. It was concluded that this scoring system is simple and accurate for the detection of HPV infection in cervical lesions.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Emerging evidence suggests that penile cancer follows 2 etiologic pathways, 1 related to human papillomavirus (HPV) infection and the other related to other factors including phimosis, chronic inflammation, and lichen sclerosus. HPV DNA is found in 47% to 48% of all penile tumors, and most of these cases correspond to high-risk genotypes, preferentially HPV-16. HPV status is associated with histologic subtype, with higher detection ratios in warty-basaloid carcinomas and lower detection ratios in keratinizing variants (ie, verrucous, papillary, and usual squamous cell carcinomas). It is the cell type, rather than a distinctive architecture, that is more strongly associated with HPV presence. The detection ratio is higher in tumors composed entirely or partially of cells with basaloid features. In addition, a few studies have evaluated the impact of HPV infection on the prognosis of patients with penile cancer. However, results are controversial, and more data are needed to clarify this matter. A proper understanding of the role of HPV in penile carcinogenesis might help in planning intervention strategies such as vaccination against HPV infection.  相似文献   

16.
We devised a scoring system, "HPV score", for histological diagnosis of human papillomavirus (HPV) infection in dysplasia of the uterine cervix. Four hundred and sixty cases of cervical dysplasia were screened for the presence of HPV infection using this system, and 116 cases (25%) were judged to be HPV infection. The results showed good correlation with those obtained using the immunoperoxldase (IMPO) method, but 42 of the 116 cases (36%) were negative for HPV antigen by the IMPO method. Severe stromal inflammation was noted in about half of such cases. Among the four histological types of cervical condyloma, the flat type was most common among the cases with HPV infection judged according to HPV score. It was concluded that this scoring system is simple and accurate for the detection of HPV infection in cervical lesions.  相似文献   

17.
A heterogeneous spectrum of epithelial alterations and atypical lesions affect the squamous epithelium of penile mucosal anatomical compartments. Analogous to other genital sites, the terminology utilized to define the lesions is variable. The few pathologic studies of penile precancerous lesions are mostly related to carcinoma in situ and human papilloma virus (HPV), and the information on low-grade atypical lesions is limited. The objective of this study was to comprehensively describe the morphologic features of all epithelial alterations, benign and atypical, low grade and high grade, associated with invasive squamous cell carcinoma of the penis and to investigate their relation with each other and with subtypes of invasive carcinoma. We also propose herein a simple and reproducible nomenclature for penile precancerous abnormalities until more biological, molecular, or epidemiologic information on the lesions is available. Two hundred and eighty-eight penectomy and circumcision specimens with invasive squamous cell carcinoma were pathologically evaluated. Carcinomas were classified as usual, verrucous, papillary not otherwise specified, warty (condylomatous), basaloid, and mixed. Associated lesions were classified as squamous hyperplasia and squamous intraepithelial lesions of low and high grade (LGSIL and HGSIL). In LGSIL, atypia was confined to the lower third, and in HGSIL, atypical cells affected at least two thirds of the squamous epithelium. Subtypes of SIL were squamous, warty, basaloid, warty-basaloid, and papillary. Squamous hyperplasia, the most common lesion, was found in 83% of the cases, followed by LGSIL (59%) and HGSIL (44%). In 62% of the cases more than 1 associated lesion was present per specimen. A sequence from squamous hyperplasia to low-grade to high-grade SIL was seen frequently. Squamous hyperplasia was more commonly associated with usual squamous, papillary, and verrucous than with warty and basaloid invasive carcinomas. LGSIL was associated with all types of squamous cell carcinoma but was rarely present adjacent to basaloid or verrucous tumors. HGSIL was present in two thirds of invasive warty, basaloid, and mixed warty-basaloid tumors, in about half of usual squamous cell carcinomas, and was absent in papillary and verrucous carcinomas. Correlation of special types of invasive carcinomas with subtypes of SIL revealed morphologic correspondence of invasive tumor and the associated intraepithelial lesion. Squamous LGSIL was preferentially associated with verrucous, papillary, and usual squamous cell carcinomas; warty LGSIL, with invasive warty and mixed warty-basaloid carcinomas. High-grade SIL of the squamous type was frequently found in squamous cell carcinoma of usual type but was rarely present with warty or basaloid carcinomas. Basaloid HGSIL was associated with basaloid carcinoma, and HGSIL of warty type, with either warty or mixed warty-basaloid carcinomas. The high frequency of squamous hyperplasia and LGSIL and preferential association with usual, verrucous, and papillary carcinomas plus the subtle morphologic differences of the 2 lesions suggest that, despite its benign appearance, squamous hyperplasia is a precursor of the aforementioned carcinomas. The association and histologic similarities between high-grade SIL of the basaloid, warty, or mixed forms with their invasive counterparts indicate these lesions are their likely precursors.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Acuminate condylomas from the penis (n=17) and anus (six cases), three anal/penile giant condylomas, anal Bowen's disease (four cases), and intraanal squamous cell carcinomas with associated condylomatous changes (10 cases) including two verrucous carcinoma were studied for human papillomavirus (HPV) infections with nick translated, biotinylated cDNA probes for HPV 6, 11, 16 and 18. In addition, six cases of flat white penile lesions designated as lichen sclerosus et atrophicus were examined.Reannealed complementary DNA strands were detected in situ with either immunoenzyme or immunogold protocols.The in situ hybridizations resulted in 1/6 positive penile lichenoid lesions, 12/17 positive penile acuminate condylomas, 6/6 positive anal acuminate condylomas (including two condylomas with cellular atypias), 2/3 positive giant condylomas, 1/4 positive anal bowenoid lesions, and 4/10 positive keratinized squamous cell carcinomas, two of them being verrucous carcinomas. All penile/anal condylomas and two giant condylomas harboured HPV 6 and/or 11 DNA.The five positive carcinomas (carcinoma in situ/invasive cancer) contained HPV 6 and/or 11 in two cases (including the verrucous carcinomas), and HPV 16 and/or 18 in three cases (one carcinoma in situ, two invasive carcinomas).Recurrent malignancies were seen in one case to harbour the same HPV type as the primary lesions (HPV 16). In one particular patient, a double infection with HPV 16 and HPV 18 was demonstrated in distantly located malignant tumours. Our study confirms the restrictions and the value of non-isotopic hybridization methods applied to archival tissues, and extends the knowledge on the presence and distribution of HPV infections at anogenital sites.This study was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Lo 285/2-4) and the Hamburger Stiftung zur Förderung der Krebsbekämpfung  相似文献   

19.
The highest frequency of penile cancer occurs in Asia, Africa, and Latin America, and there have been a few reports concerning the association of penile cancer with human papillomavirus (HPV) infection in these areas. The objective of this study was to determine the relation between penile cancer and the prevalence of HPV genotypes in northern Thailand. Eighty-eight specimens of penile tissue (65 malignant, 1 pre-malignant, and 22 benign cases) were examined to determine the association of HPV infection. An in situ hybridization (ISH) method was used to detect and localize HPV-DNA. Sensitive HPV polymerase chain reaction (PCR) procedure was used for detection of HPV-DNA, and DNA sequencing was used to identify the HPV genotype. HPV-DNA was detected in 53.8% and 81.5% of cases of penile cancer, using ISH and PCR, respectively. The high-risk HPV-16, most commonly associated with penile cancer in previous reports, was found in only one case in this study. The most prevalent genotype was the high-risk HPV-18, found in 55.4% of the cases (32.3% single and 23.1% multiple infection) followed by the low-risk HPV-6, found in 43.1% of the cases (24.6% single and 18.5% multiple infection). In this study, penile cancer was found to be highly correlated with HPV-DNA. Specifically, infection with both the low-risk HPV-6 and the high-risk HPV-18 is the characteristic prevalence of HPV genotypes in penile cancer in this area.  相似文献   

20.
The role of human papilloma virus (HPV) infection in the development of cervical carcinoma is well established, however, the prevalence of HPV DNA in cervical adenocarcinoma varies from study to study. It appears to be caused by a number of factors, one of which is that cervical adenocarcinomas comprise a heterogeneous group of multiple subtypes. To clarify the impact of HPV infection on the development of cervical adenocarcinoma with diverse histological subtypes, we performed a population-based study in Korean women from 15 different institutes for the status of HPV infection in adenocarcinoma of uterine cervix. A total of 432 cervical adenocarcinomas from 1997 to 2001 were reviewed and classified according to the modified WHO classification. For 135 cases, HPV typing was performed with HPV DNA chip (82 cases) and PCR HPV typing (53 cases), using formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded archival tissue. The overall prevalence of HPV infection in cervical adenocarcinoma was 90%. The infection of HPV 16 and/or HPV 18 accounted for 78% of HPV-positive adenocarcinomas. Multiple HPV types were found in 13% of the cases. The HPV DNA was rarely detected in minimal deviation adenocarcinoma. Interestingly, HPV 16 was a predominant type in endometrioid and villoglandular types, whereas HPV 16 and HPV 18 were detected with equal prevalence in other subtypes. In conclusion, HPV infection, mostly HPV 16 and HPV 18, is highly associated with most of the cervical adenocarcinomas, whereas endometrioid and villoglandular type have a different pattern of HPV infection status. Minimal deviation adenocarcinoma does not seem to be related with HPV infection.  相似文献   

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