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1.
Human papillomavirus (HPV) is a risk factor for the development of benign and malignant mucosal head and neck lesions. P16INK4A is often used as a surrogate marker for HPV‐infection, although there is still controversy with respect its reliability. Our aim was to determine if p16INK4A overexpression can accurately predict both high‐risk and low‐risk‐HPV‐presence in (pre)malignant and benign head and neck lesions. P16INK4A immunohistochemistry was performed on paraffin‐embedded tissue sections of 162 oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinomas (OPSCC), 14 tonsillar and 23 laryngeal dysplasias, and 20 tonsillar and 27 laryngeal papillomas. PCR, enzyme‐immunoassay and FISH analysis were used to assess HPV‐presence and type. Of the 162 OPSCC and 14 tonsillar dysplasias, 51 (31%) and 10 (71%) were HPV16‐positive, respectively. All tonsillar papillomas were HPV‐negative and four laryngeal dysplasias and 26 laryngeal papillomas were positive for HPV6 or ?11. P16INK4A immunohistochemistry revealed a strong nuclear and cytoplasmic staining in 50 out of 51 HPV16‐positive and 5 out of 111 HPV‐negative OPSCC (p < 0.0001) and in all HPV16‐positive tonsillar dysplasias, whereas highly variable staining patterns were detected in the papillomas and laryngeal dysplasias, irrespective of the HPV‐status. In addition, the latter lesions generally showed a higher nuclear than cytoplasmic p16INK4A immunostaining intensity. In conclusion, our data show that strong nuclear and cytoplasmic p16INK4A overexpression is a reliable surrogate indicator for HPV16 in OPSCC and (adjacent) dysplasias. For HPV6 or ?11‐positive and HPV‐negative benign and premalignant lesions of the tonsil and larynx, however, p16INK4A immunostaining is highly variable and cannot be recommended to predict HPV‐presence.  相似文献   

2.
p16INK4a immunohistochemical overexpression is an overall reliable surrogate marker of human papillomavirus (HPV)‐associated head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCC). However, cases of ambiguous p16INK4a overexpression are regularly detected in the head and neck: p16INK4a expression can be observed in non‐malignant tissue, such as tonsillar crypt epithelium and a proportion of branchial cleft cysts. Additionally, diverse patterns of p16INK4 expression can complicate interpretation of “p16INK4a‐positivity”. These aspects impede the unrestricted application of p16INK4a as a diagnostic marker in the head and neck. We hypothesized that combined detection of p16INK4a and the proliferation marker Ki‐67 could support clarification of ambiguous p16INK4a expression in the head and neck by specifically indicating p16INK4a‐expressing cells with proliferative activity. p16INK4a/Ki‐67 co‐expression in a combined staining procedure was correlated to distinct p16INK4a expression patterns and HPV status (HPV DNA followed by E6*I oncogene mRNA detection) in 147 HNSCC and 50 non‐malignant head and neck samples. p16INK4a/Ki‐67 co‐expression only occurred in transformed cells of the head and neck. Co‐expression was never detected in non‐transformed cells. Combined p16INK4a/Ki‐67 expression was stringently associated with a diffuse p16INK4a expression pattern. All HPV oncogene‐expressing HNSCC showed p16INK4a/Ki‐67 co‐expression. We demonstrate that p16INK4a/Ki‐67 co‐expression occurs exclusively in transformed cells of the head and neck. Our findings indicate a substantial impact of combined p16INK4a/Ki‐67 expression in the assessment of ambiguous p16INK4a expression in the head and neck by specifically identifying p16INK4a‐expressing cells with proliferative activity. This property will be of considerable significance for head and neck histo‐ and cytopathology.  相似文献   

3.

Objective

In cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN), p16INK4a immunohistochemistry has been reported to be a useful diagnostic biomarker. However, limited information is available about the association between the p16INK4a immunohistochemistry and the outcomes of CIN. Here, we report p16INK4a immunohistochemistry as an effective biomarker to predict the outcomes of CIN.

Methods

p16INK4a immunohistochemistry was performed in patients with CIN from January 2000 to August 2009. Among these patients, we have performed a retrospective analysis of the medical records to evaluate the outcome of CIN 1-2 and performed statistical analysis to determine the correlation between p16INK4a expression and the outcomes. We also performed HPV genotyping and analyzed the relation between the infecting human papillomavirus (HPV) genotype and the outcomes.

Results

A total of 244 patients, including 82 with CIN 1, 60 with CIN 2, and 102 with CIN 3, were examined. The rate of p16INK4a overexpression increased with increasing CIN grade, 20.7% for CIN 1, 80.0% for CIN 2, and 89.2% for CIN 3, with significant differences between CIN 1 and CIN 2-3 group. In the 131 CIN 1-2 patients, the progression rate was significantly higher for the patients showing p16INK4a overexpression than for those not showing p16INK4a overexpression (p=0.005); the regression rate was also found to be significantly lower for the patients showing p16INK4a overexpression (p=0.003). High-risk HPV genotypes were detected in 73 patients (73.7%). Both progression and regression rates were not significantly different between the high-risk HPV-positive and HPV-negative groups (p=0.401 and p=0.381, respectively).

Conclusion

p16INK4a overexpression was correlated with the outcome of CIN 1-2, and p16INK4a is considered to be a superior biomarker for predicting the outcome of CIN 1-2 compared with HPV genotyping.  相似文献   

4.
Epidemiological and mechanistic evidence on the causative role of human papillomaviruses (HPV) in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) is unclear. We retrieved alcohol‐ and formalin‐fixed paraffin‐embedded ESCC tissues from 133 patients seropositive for antibodies against HPV early proteins, from high‐incidence ESCC regions: South Africa, China and Iran. With rigorous care to prevent nucleic acid contamination, we analyzed these tissues for the presence of 51 mucosotropic human alpha‐papillomaviruses by two sensitive, broad‐spectrum genotyping methods, and for the markers of HPV‐transformed phenotype: (i) HPV16/18 viral loads by quantitative real‐time PCR, (ii) type‐specific viral mRNA by E6*I/E6 full‐length RT‐PCR assays and (iii) expression of cellular protein p16INK4a. Of 118 analyzable ESCC tissues, 10 (8%) were positive for DNA of HPV types: 16 (4 tumors); 33, 35, 45 (1 tumor each); 11 (2 tumors) and 16, 70 double infection (1 tumor). Inconsistent HPV DNA+ findings by two genotyping methods and negativity in qPCR indicated very low viral loads. A single HPV16 DNA+ tumor additionally harbored HPV16 E6*I mRNA but was p16INK4a negative (HPV16 E1 seropositive patient). Another HPV16 DNA+ tumor from an HPV16 E6 seropositive patient showed p16INK4a upregulation but no HPV16 mRNA. In the tumor tissues of these serologically preselected ESCC patients, we did not find consistent presence of HPV DNA, HPV mRNA or p16INK4a upregulation. These results were supported by a meta‐analysis of 14 other similar studies regarding HPV‐transformation of ESCC. Our study does not support the etiological role of the 51 analyzed mucosotropic HPV types in the ESCC carcinogenesis.  相似文献   

5.
BackgroundHuman papilloma virus (HPV) infection is implicated in a proportion of invasive squamous cell carcinoma of the penis (PC). A subset of PC involves dysregulation of the p53 pathway. HPV in situ hybridization (ISH) and p16ink4a positivity are surrogate markers for HPV infection, and p53 immunohistochemistry (IHC) denotes abnormality in the p53 pathway. There remains an ambiguity with regard to the contribution of both the pathways in the prognosis of PC. We sought to analyze the clinicopathologic characteristics of a cohort of Indian PC patients with respect to p16 ink4a and p53 expression.Patients and MethodsA cohort of 123 PC patients was studied for p16ink4aand p53IHC and HPVISH. The results of these biomarkers were correlated with various clinicopathologic parameters.Resultsp16ink4a and HPV ISH were positive in 47% and 53% of the tumors, respectively. The proportion of warty, basaloid, or mixed warty-basaloid tumor subtypes showed significant p16ink4apositivity (P < .0001) compared to other subtypes. Twenty-eight patients were dual negative (p53- /p16ink4a-), 32 were dual positive (p53+/p16ink4a+), 38 were p53+/p16ink4a-, and 25 were p53-/p16ink4a +. In patients where p16ink4a was negative, a p53-positive phenotype had a higher propensity for lymph node metastases (OR, 5.42; 95% CI, 1.75-16.80; P = .003). Similarly, p53 positivity dictates nodal involvement in the p16ink4a-positive subset of tumors (OR, 5.00; 95% CI, 1.23-20.17; P = .024). On multivariate analyses, pathologic subtypes (warty, warty-basaloid, and basaloid) (P < .0001), p16ink4aexpression (P < .0001), and absence of nodal metastasis (P < .0001) were significant predictors of improved overall (OS) and cancer specific survival (CSS). In Kaplan-Meier analysis, the OS was significantly longer in patients with p16ink4a + tumors (P < .0001), as was the CSS (P < .0001). Patients with dual positive tumors had a significantly higher OS (P < .001) and CSS (P = .012), in the entire cohort. In the node positive patients, dual positivity was associated with significantly higher OS (P < .0001); however, the median CSS for p53+/p16ink4a+tumors were not significantly different compared to p53- /p16ink4a- tumors (P = .064), although there was a trend towards improved CSS.ConclusionsThere is a strong concordance between p16ink4aIHC and HPV ISH results. p16ink4a status is an independent predictor of survival (OS and CSS) in our cohort of PCs. p53 is a predictor of nodal metastasis irrespective of p16 status. Dual positive tumors have a significantly better outcome in comparison to dual negative tumors;  相似文献   

6.
The causal role of human papillomaviruses (HPV) in squamous cell carcinogenesis of tonsillar cancers (TSCC) depends on the activity of the viral oncoproteins E6 and E7, leading to inactivation of the cellular tumor suppressor p53 and the retinoblastoma gene product pRb. Because of the negative feedback mechanisms, the pRb inactivation causes an increase of the inhibitor of the cyclin‐dependent kinases p16INK4a. In 39 TSCC specimens, genotyping based on the amplification of HPV DNA was carried out using PCR by applying HPV type‐specific oligonucleotides. Subsequently, amplicons were hybridised with fluorescence‐labeled complementary probes using the Southern blot technology. For HPV E6/E7 mRNA expression, Northern hybridization and RT‐PCR were performed, and for p16INK4a detection, immunohistochemistry was performed. With 21/39 (53%) HPV‐positives, the detection rate is within the range that can be expected in TSCC. The E6/E7 oncogene mRNA was detectable in 11 cases, 10 of which showed positive signals after p16INK4a staining. Albeit the small study group was investigated, the correlation of the HPV DNA status with the p16INK4a expression was of statistical significance (p = 0.02). Kaplan‐Meier estimations revealed better survival outcome for patients with HPV‐positive tumors with detectable E6/E7 mRNA and p16INK4a overexpression (p = 0.02, median observation time 29 months). As mRNA expression tests are not routinely available in many clinical diagnostic laboratories, and based on the high correlation of p16INK4a staining with HPV E6/E7 mRNA expression, in conclusion we suggest for a deeper exploration for the use of p16INK4a as a surrogate marker with the potential to impact the standard of care of HPV DNA‐positive head and neck carcinomas.  相似文献   

7.

Background

The pathogenic role of beta-HPVs in non melanoma skin cancer (NMSC), is not still completely understood, and literature data indicate that they might be at least cofactors in the development of certain cutaneous squamous cell carcinomas. However, only few reports contain data on basal cell carcinoma (BCC). The HPVs interact with many cellular proteins altering their function or the expression levels, like the p16INK4a and Akt. Our study aimed to determine the presence of different beta -HPV types and the expression of p16INK4a and Akt in BCC, the commonest NMSC, in the normal appearing perilesional skin and in forehead swab of 37 immunocompetent patients.

Methods

The expression of p16INK4a and Akt, by immunohistochemistry, and the HPV DNA, by nested PCR, were investigated in each sample.

Results

No correspondence of HPV types between BCC and swab samples was found, whereas a correspondence between perilesional skin and BCC was ascertained in the 16,7% of the patients. In BCC, 16 different types of beta HPV were found and the most frequent types were HPV107 (15,4%), HPV100 (11,5%) and HPV15 (11,5%) all belonging to the beta HPV species 2. Immunohistochemistry detected significant p16INK4a expression in almost all tumor samples (94,3%) with the highest percentages (> 30%) of positive cells detected in 8 cases. A statistically significant (p = 0,012) increase of beta HPV presence was detected in p16INK4a strongly positive samples, in particular of species 2. pAkt expression was detected in all tumor samples with only 2 cases showing rare positive cells, whereas Akt2 expression was found in 14 out of 35 BCC (40%); in particular in HPV positive samples over-expressing p16INK4a.

Conclusions

Our data show that p16INK4a and pAkt are over-expressed in BCC and that the high expression of p16INK4a and of Akt2 isoform is often associated with the presence of beta-HPV species 2 (i.e. HPV 15). The association of these viruses with the up-regulation of p16INK4a and Akt/PI3K pathway suggests that in a subtype of BCC these viruses may exert a role in the carcinogenesis or in other, still undefined, biological property of these tumors. If this particular type of BCC reflects a different biology it will remain undisclosed until further studies on a larger number of samples will be performed.  相似文献   

8.
E Kunze  A Schauer  M Schmitt 《Cancer》1983,51(2):348-358
Inverted papillomas are rare tumors of the lower urinary tract. Among 1829 reclassified tumors of the urinary bladder, renal pelves, ureters, and urethra, there were 40 (2.2%) inverted papillomas. The great majority of these were localized in the bladder. Because of distinctive histologic features and patterns of growth it is possible to differentiate between two basic types of inverted papillomas which were termed "trabecular" and "glandular." The trabecular type consists of widely branched, anastomosing cords of urothelial cells originating directly from the overlying transitional epithelium. The trabeculae are arranged horizontally or perpendicularly to the surface epithelium and occasionally exhibit peripheral palisading of the cells. The glandular type is characterized by multiple round to oval islands of proliferated urothelial cells together with pseudoglandular and true glandular structures which are often still connected with the surface urothelium. The gland-like structures are lined by stratified urothelium, the true glands by mucus secreting columnar epithelium. Sometimes glandular metaplasia of an intestinal type with goblet cell formation could be observed. Inverted papillomas of the trabecular type arise histogenetically from a proliferation of the basal cells of the urothelium. The glandular type develops apparently from a proliferative cystitis cystica and glandularis which, therefore, should be considered a potentially preneoplastic lesion. The predominant view of the biological behavior of inverted papillomas is that of a benign neoplastic lesion. Morphologic findings supplied some arguments in favor of a low grade malignant potential of these tumors. However, their malignant transformation seemed to be much lower than that of exophytic papillomas.  相似文献   

9.
As the detection rate of HPV‐DNA in anal carcinoma commonly exceeds 90%, a comparison between sole HPV‐positive and HPV‐negative cancers with respect to treatment response following chemoradiotherapy (CRT) and long‐term oncological outcome is challenging. Against this background, we aimed to assess HPV types and HPV DNA load in formalin‐fixed paraffin‐embedded tissue (FFPE) of 95 patients treated with standard CRT for anal cancer to correlate viral load (≤/> median) with local failure, distant metastases, cancer‐specific (CSS) and overall survival (OS) rates. Various clinicopathologic parameters and the immunohistochemical marker p16INK4a were evaluated for any correlation with HPV16 DNA load and were included in uni‐ and multivariate analyses. The overall prevalence of HPV DNA was 95.8% with HPV16 monoinfection being the most commonly encountered HPV type (78.9%), followed by HPV16 and 31, 35, 39, 44, 58, 66 and 81 dual infection in 9 patients (9.5%). HPV16 DNA load was significantly associated with p16INK4a expression (p = 0.001). Patients with HPV16 DNA load ≤ median and low p16INK4a expression showed significantly worse local control (HPV16 DNA load: univariate p = 0.023, multivariate p = 0.042; p16INK4a: univariate p = 0.021), and OS (HPV16 DNA load: univariate p = 0.02, multivariate p = 0.03). Moreover, a combined HPV16 DNA load and p16INK4a variable revealed a significant correlation to decreased local failure, and increased CSS and OS (p = 0.019, p = 0.04 and p = 0.031). In conclusion, these data indicate that HPV16 DNA load and p16INK4a expression are significant prognostic factors for local tumor control and overall survival of patients with anal SCC following CRT.  相似文献   

10.

BACKGROUND:

The authors elucidated an etiologic role of human papillomavirus (HPV) infection in carcinoma of the bladder.

METHODS:

One hundred seventeen of 224 patients with bladder carcinoma who were treated between 1997 and 2009 were enrolled in this study. The presence of HPV DNA was tested on frozen carcinoma tissues that were obtained by transurethral resection using a polymerases chain reaction‐based method. Localization of HPV was observed on archival tissue specimens by in situ hybridization (ISH) for high‐risk HPV DNA. Cyclin‐dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitor 2A (inhibits CDK4) (p16‐INK4a) and minichromosome maintenance protein‐7 (mcm‐7)—surrogate markers for high‐risk HPV‐E7 oncoprotein—and HPV‐L1 (capsid) protein expression were evaluated by immunohistochemistry.

RESULTS:

HPV types 16, 18, 31, 33, 52, and 58, and an unknown HPV type were detected in 18 of 117 samples (15%) from patients with bladder carcinoma. HPV16 was identified in 6 samples, HPV18 was identified in 4 samples, and HPV33 was identified in 3 samples. All were single HPV type infections. HPV was detected in 38% (12 of 28) of histologic grade 1 bladder carcinomas, 8.5% (6 of 71) of grade 2 bladder carcinomas, and in 0% (0 of 18) of grade 3 bladder carcinomas. Multivariate analysis indicated that younger age (<60 years; odds ratio [OR], 10.9; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.6‐45.3) and grade 1 tumors (OR, 4.5; 95% CI, 1.2‐17.0) were associated with HPV infection. ISH analysis indicated that high‐risk HPV DNA was localized in the nuclei of tumor cells of all HPV‐positive samples. p16‐INK4a and mcm‐7 were expressed in 94% and 89% of HPV‐positive carcinoma cells, respectively. HPV‐L1 protein expression, which suggested reproductive HPV infection, was not observed in any carcinoma.

CONCLUSIONS:

The current results indicated that high‐risk HPV is likely to be a causative agent of some low‐grade bladder carcinomas that develop in younger patients. Cancer 2011. © 2010 American Cancer Society.  相似文献   

11.
Knowledge about human papillomaviruses (HPV) types involved in anal cancers in some world regions is scanty. Here, we describe the HPV DNA prevalence and type distribution in a series of invasive anal cancers and anal intraepithelial neoplasias (AIN) grades 2/3 from 24 countries. We analyzed 43 AIN 2/3 cases and 496 anal cancers diagnosed from 1986 to 2011. After histopathological evaluation of formalin‐fixed paraffin‐embedded samples, HPV DNA detection and genotyping was performed using SPF‐10/DEIA/LiPA25 system (version 1) . A subset of 116 cancers was further tested for p16INK4a expression, a cellular surrogate marker for HPV‐associated transformation. Prevalence ratios were estimated using multivariate Poisson regression with robust variance in the anal cancer data set. HPV DNA was detected in 88.3% of anal cancers (95% confidence interval [CI]: 85.1–91.0%) and in 95.3% of AIN 2/3 (95% CI: 84.2–99.4%). Among cancers, the highest prevalence was observed in warty–basaloid subtype of squamous cell carcinomas, in younger patients and in North American geographical region. There were no statistically significant differences in prevalence by gender. HPV16 was the most frequent HPV type detected in both cancers (80.7%) and AIN 2/3 lesions (75.4%). HPV18 was the second most common type in invasive cancers (3.6%). p16INK4a overexpression was found in 95% of HPV DNA‐positive anal cancers. In view of the results of HPV DNA and high proportion of p16INK4a overexpression, infection by HPV is most likely to be a necessary cause for anal cancers in both men and women. The large contribution of HPV16 reinforces the potential impact of HPV vaccines in the prevention of these lesions.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Human astrocytomas are characterized by a number of molecular changes affecting two critical tumor suppressor pathways: the pRB and the p53 pathways. Genetic alterations functionally eliminate pRB and p53 themselves or upstream and/or downstream molecules such as products of theInk4a/ARF locus, p16Ink4a and p14ARF. As a result, malignant cells are defective in critical cell cycle and apoptosis regulatory elements contributing to unrelenting tumour growth and invasion. Current research aims to discover effective means of reconstituting p53 and pRB pathway components in an effort to attenuate the aggressive phenotype of astrocytoma.  相似文献   

14.
Infections with human papillomaviruses are divided basically into three different infection types: those producing specific clinically visible lesions, those remaining subclinical, and those being latent. The assumed infection type thought to be present in tissue specimens has influence on the conclusions that can be made from an analysis, i.e. whether or not the HPV infection has a causal relationship with other epidemiological or molecular investigation observations. To determine whether HPV DNA detection in different entities of the upper aerodigestive tract represents a coincidental, persistent/latent or specific infection, 20 clinically intact mucosa specimens of the upper aerodigestive tract, 20 sinonasal polyps, 26 inverted papillomas, and 20 squamous cell carcinomas of the paranasal sinuses were investigated. HPV DNA was not detectable in specimens derived from clinically intact mucosa or in nasal polyps. Yet, three out of 26 inverted papillomas were HPV-positive, each showing double infection with HPV6 and 11. Four out of 20 squamous cell carcinomas were HPV16 positive. To our knowledge, we are presenting the first study contemporaneously analyzing benign as well as malignant non-proliferative and proliferative mucosal entities whilst applying identical methodical standards. The data corroborate the hypothesis that HPV DNA demonstration in tissue specimens represents a specific infection of the mucosa of the upper aerodigestive tract. It can thus be assumed that there is a causative involvement of HPV infections in the alteration of cell proliferation and in the case of infection with high risk HPV types even on progression to malignant transformation.  相似文献   

15.
16.

Background

Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer in women worldwide with highest incidence reported in Eastern Africa in 2012. The primary goal of this study was to study the expression of p16INK4a in squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the cervix by immunohistochemistry (IHC) and determine relation with clinico-pathological parameters. This study further explored the correlation of p16INK4a immunostaining with another proliferation marker, Ki-67 and to study if human papillomavirus (HPV) IHC can be used as a marker for detection of virus in high-grade dysplasia.

Methods

A total of 90 samples, diagnosed for cervical cancer, were included in the study. Fixed Paraffin Embedded (FFPE) tissue sections were stained with anti-p16INK4a, anti-Ki-67 and anti-HPV antibodies using automated immunohistochemistry platform (ASLink 48-DAKO).

Results

Immunohistochemical protein expression of p16INK4a positivity was found to be highest in SCC (92.2%, n = 71) than other HPV tumors (76.9%, n = 10). The majority of cases (97.4%) were p16INK4a positive in the age group 41–60 years. In addition, a statistically significant difference between p16INK4a and HPV was observed among total cervical tumor cases and SCC cases.

Conclusions

As expected staining of invasive cervical cancer with anti-HPV showed rare positivity because HPV heralds active infection in dysplastic lesions and not of frank cervical carcinoma. In contrast, anti-p16INK4a IHC results showed positive correlation in SCC and other cervical tumors.
  相似文献   

17.
Objective: To explore the correlation of human papillomavious (HPV) infection with expression of p53 andproliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) in patients with different ethnicity in Xinjiang, China. Methods: 166biopsy specimens from 83 laryngeal squamous cell carcinomas (LSCC), 63 laryngeal papillomas (LP), and 20laryngeal inflammatory polyps (LIP) were included in this study. HPV infection was determined by polymerasechain reaction (PCR) using specific types of HPV primers. Expression of p53 and PCNA was assessed usingimmunohistostaining. Results: The frequency of HPV 6/11 was higher in LP (33.3%) than in LSCC (9.6%) (P<0.0005), whereas the frequency of HPV 16/18 was higher in LSCC (37.3 %) than in LP (6.3%) (P < 0.0005).Patients of the Han ethnic group with LSCC had a higher infection rate with HPV 6/11 or HPV 6/11 and HPV16/18 coinfection than those of Uygur and Kazak ethnicity (P <0.05). Overexpression of p53 and PCNA were higherin LSCC (62.7%, 57.8%) than in LP (38%, 33.3%) (P <0.005, and P <0.005, respectively). That of p53 was notassociated with lymph-node metastases and clinical stages, but overexpression of PCNA closely correlated withclinical stage. Conclusions: These results strongly implicate HPV6/11 infection in the carcinogenesis of LSCC andLP, respectively. There was a higher coincidence of increased malignancy of laryngeal tumors with overexpressionof p53 and PCNA. Overexpression of p53 may serve as an early risk marker for malignant transformation inHPV infected cells while the overexpression of PCNA may serve as a late marker for progression of LSCC.  相似文献   

18.
The accurate diagnosis of human papillomavirus (HPV) causality in oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinomas (OPSCC) is likely to influence therapeutic decisions in affected patients in the near future. We conducted a systematic review and meta‐analysis to determine the diagnostic accuracy of p16INK4a immunohistochemistry (IHC) to identify HPV‐induced OPSCC. We identified all studies that performed p16INK4a IHC (index test) and HPV E6/E7 mRNA detection using an amplification‐based method (gold standard to indicate a transforming relevance of HPV) in OPSCC. Testing with one or more comparator tests (HPV DNA PCR, HPV DNA in situ hybridization (ISH) and p16INK4a IHC/HPV DNA PCR combined testing) was an optional criterion for inclusion. Among 1,636 retrieved studies 24 fulfilled the inclusion criteria. The pooled sensitivity of p16INK4a IHC, HPV DNA PCR, HPV DNA ISH and p16INK4a IHC/HPV DNA PCR combined testing was 94% (95%‐confidence interval (CI) 91–97%), 98% (CI 94–100%), 85% (CI 76–92%) and 93% (CI 87–97%), respectively. The pooled specificity was 83% (CI 78–88%), 84% (CI 74–92%), 88% (CI 78–96%) and 96% (CI 89–100%), respectively. p16INK4a IHC/HPV DNA PCR combined testing was as sensitive as either p16INK4a IHC or HPV DNA PCR alone but significantly more specific than either separate test. In conclusion, p16INK4a IHC is highly sensitive but moderately specific to diagnose HPV‐transformed OPSCC when used as a single test. Combined p16INK4a IHC and HPV DNA PCR testing significantly enhances specificity while maintaining high sensitivity. This diagnostic test combination thus represents an attractive testing strategy for the reliable diagnosis of HPV‐induced OPSCC in the clinical setting and may constitute an inclusion criterion for future therapeutic trials.  相似文献   

19.
p16(Ink4a) is a protein involved in regulation of the cell cycle. Currently, p16(Ink4a) is considered a tumor suppressor protein because of its physiological role and downregulated expression in a large number of tumors. Intriguingly, overexpression of p16(Ink4a) has also been described in several tumors. This review attempts to elucidate when and why p16(Ink4a) overexpression occurs, and to suggest possible implications of p16(Ink4a) in the diagnosis, prognosis and treatment of cancer.  相似文献   

20.
The role of human papillomavirus (HPV) in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) development has been recognized only in the last decade. Although younger patients develop HNSCC associated with HPV, the incidence in young patients has not been studied. Forty-five young HNSCC patients (<40 years) were tested for HPV and the expression of p16(ink4a) and p53 in tumor biopsies. The presence of HPV was correlated with the absence and presence of alcohol and tobacco exposure. Paraffin-embedded, archival biopsy materials from HNSCC of 45 patients younger than 40 years were analyzed. HPV subtypes were identified by PCR followed by genotyping. Expression of p16(ink4a) and p53 were determined by immunohistochemistry. Fourteen (31%) of the HNSCC specimens from 45 patients unequivocally exhibited HPV16 positivity. Sixty percentage of the oropharyngeal tumors and 5% of the oral cavity tumors were HPV16 positive. P16(ink4a) overexpression was detected in 93% of the HPV16-positive tumors. None of the HPV16 tumors showed p53 overexpression. There was no association of HPV positivity with (lack of) exposure to alcohol and smoking. HPV association was not exclusively detected in nonsmoking, nondrinking young HNSCC patients. The presence of p16(ink4a) accumulation and the absence of p53 overexpression are good surrogate markers for HPV-associated HNSCC.  相似文献   

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