Role of mucosal high-risk human papillomavirus types in head and neck cancers in central India.
Int J Cancer. 2017 Mar 29;:
Authors: Gheit T, Anantharaman D, Holzinger D, Alemany L, Tous S, Lucas E, Prabhu PR, Pawlita M, Ridder R, Rehm S, Bogers J, Maffini F, Chiocca S, Lloveras B, Vijay Kumar R, Somanathan T, de Sanjosé S, Castellsagué X, Arbyn M, Brennan P, Sankaranarayanan R, Pillai MR, Gangane N, Tommasino M, HPV-AHEAD study group
Abstract
Mucosal high-risk (HR) human papillomaviruses (HPV) cause a subset of head and neck cancers (HNC). The HPV-attributable fraction of HNC varies substantially between countries. Although HNC has a very high incidence in the Indian sub-continent, information on the contribution of HPV infection is limited. Here, we evaluated the HPV-attributable fraction in HNC (N=364) collected in a central region of India. HNC from three different anatomical subsites were included, namely oral cavity (n=252), oropharynx (n=53) and hypopharynx/larynx (n=59). In this retrospective study, HPV-driven HNC were defined by presence of both viral DNA and RNA. Overexpression of p16(INK4a) was also evaluated. HR-HPV DNA was detected in 13.7% of the cases; however only 2.7% were positive for both HPV DNA and RNA. The highest percentage of HPV DNA/RNA double positivity was found in oropharynx (9.4%), followed by larynx (1.7%) and oral cavity (1.6%) (p=0.02). More than half of HPV DNA/RNA-positive cases were p16(INK4a) -negative, while a considerable number of HPV RNA-negative cases were p16(INK4a) -positive (17.9%). HPV16 was the major type associated with HNC (60.0%), although cases positive for HPV18, 35 and 56 were also detected. Our data indicate that the proportion and types of mucosal HR-HPV associated with HNC in this central Indian region differ from those in other (developed) parts of the world. This may be explained by differences in smoking and/or sexual behaviour compared with North America and northern Europe. Moreover, we show that p16(INK4a) staining appeared not to be a good surrogate marker of HPV transformation in the Indian HNC cases. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
PMID: 28369859 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
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