Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2115016 | Cancer Letters | 2008 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
To determine whether human papillomaviruses (HPV) positive tonsillar squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) represent a specific entity, we studied the prevalence of HPV association and of tobacco/alcohol exposure in a series of 52 cases of tonsillar SCC cases. p53, p16, and pRb levels, deregulated by viral oncoproteins were assessed. Forty patients reported tobacco/alcohol exposure, 10 reported no exposure. HPV DNA was found in 32/52 (62%) cases, (HPV16 genotype in 27). All patients with no history of tobacco-alcohol exposure presented HPV positive tumor (p = 0.0008). A strong correlation was observed between positive HPV status, decrease in pRB and increase in p16 expression level. 5 year overall survival rate was higher in HPV16 positive patients than in HPV negative (71% versus 36%; p = 0.023). HPV status remained a significant prognostic factor in multivariate analysis. Tonsillar SCC can thus be divided in HPV positive and negative subgroups with different oncogenesis and response to treatment.
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Authors
Lamia Charfi, Thomas Jouffroy, Patricia de Cremoux, Nelly Le Peltier, Martine Thioux, Paul Fréneaux, Daniel Point, Angélique Girod, José Rodriguez, Xavier Sastre-Garau,