Highly sensitive deep panel sequencing of 27 HPV genotypes in prostate cancer biopsies results in very low detection rates and indicates that HPV is not a major etiological driver of this malignancy.
Karoline Andersen, Paul Vinu Salachan, Michael Borre, Benedicte Ulhøi, Magnus Stougaard, Karina Dalsgaard Sørensen, Torben Steiniche
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Human papillomavirus (HPV) has been proposed to contribute to the carcinogenesis of prostate cancer. However, previous studies have yielded conflicting results. This study aims to add useful information to the ongoing discussion concerning the association between HPV infection and prostate cancer.
Methods: We used two high-throughput next-generation sequencing (NGS) approaches to detect HPV RNA in malignant and adjacent normal (AN) prostate tissue (cohorts 1 and 2) and HPV DNA from carcinogenic and probably/possibly carcinogenic-classified HPV types (cohort 3) in malignant prostate, AN prostate, and benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) tissues.
Results: In total, 0% (cohort 1: 0/83, cohort 2: 0/16) of the malignant prostate tissue samples and 0% (cohort 1: 0/23, cohort 2: 0/8) of the AN prostate tissue samples were positive for HPV RNA. A total of 8.3% (1/12) of the BPH samples, 0% (0/28) of the AN samples, and 0.8% (1/132) of the malignant prostate samples were positive for HPV16 DNA. However, the normalized read count of the HPV16-positive malignant sample was close to the cut-off. In addition, no other carcinogenic-classified HPV types were detected in any of the BPH, AN, or malignant prostate tissue samples.
Conclusion: Our study does not support HPV infection as a major contributor to the etiology of prostate cancer.
期刊介绍:
Infectious Agents and Cancer is an open access, peer-reviewed online journal that encompasses all aspects of basic, clinical, epidemiological and translational research providing an insight into the association between chronic infections and cancer.
The journal welcomes submissions in the pathogen-related cancer areas and other related topics, in particular:
• HPV and anogenital cancers, as well as head and neck cancers;
• EBV and Burkitt lymphoma;
• HCV/HBV and hepatocellular carcinoma as well as lymphoproliferative diseases;
• HHV8 and Kaposi sarcoma;
• HTLV and leukemia;
• Cancers in Low- and Middle-income countries.
The link between infection and cancer has become well established over the past 50 years, and infection-associated cancer contribute up to 16% of cancers in developed countries and 33% in less developed countries.
Preventive vaccines have been developed for only two cancer-causing viruses, highlighting both the opportunity to prevent infection-associated cancers by vaccination and the gaps that remain before vaccines can be developed for other cancer-causing agents. These gaps are due to incomplete understanding of the basic biology, natural history, epidemiology of many of the pathogens that cause cancer, the mechanisms they exploit to cause cancer, and how to interrupt progression to cancer in human populations. Early diagnosis or identification of lesions at high risk of progression represent the current most critical research area of the field supported by recent advances in genomics and proteomics technologies.