HPV-associated lung cancers: an international pooled analysis
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2014Metadata
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Ragin, Camille
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HPV-associated lung cancers: an international pooled analysis
Author
- Ragin, Camille;
- Obikoya Malomo, Monisola;
- Kim, Sungjin;
- Chen, Zhengjia;
- Flores Obando, Rafael;
- Gibbs, Denise;
- Koriyama, Chihaya;
- Aguayo, Francisco;
- Koshiol, Jill;
- Caporaso, Neil E.;
- Carpagnano, Giovanna E.;
- Ciotti, Marco;
- Dosaka Akita, Hirotoshi;
- Fukayama, Masashi;
- Goto, Akiteru;
- Spandidos, Demetrios A.;
- Gorgoulis, Vassilis;
- Heideman, Daniëlle A. M.;
- Van Boerdonk, Robert A.A.;
- Hiroshima, Kenzo;
- Iwakawa, Reika;
- Kastrinakis, Nikolaos G.;
- Kinoshita, Ichiro;
- Akiba, Suminori;
- Landi, Maria T.;
- Liu, H.Eugene;
- Wang, Jinn-Li;
- Mehra, Ranee;
- Khuri, Fadlo R.;
- Lim, Wan-Teck;
- Owonikoko, Taofeek K.;
- Ramalingam, Suresh;
- Sarchianaki, Emmanuela;
- Syrjanen, Kari;
- Tsao, Ming Sound;
- Sykes, Jenna;
- Hee, Siew Wan;
- Yokota, Jun;
- Zaravinos, Apostolos;
- Taioli, Emanuela;
Abstract
Human papillomavirus (HPV) is the etiologic risk factor for cervical
cancer. Some studies have suggested an association with a subset
of lung tumors, but the etiologic link has not been firmly established.
We performed an international pooled analysis of crosssectional
studies (27 datasets, n = 3249 patients) to evaluate HPV
DNA prevalence in lung cancer and to investigate viral presence
according to clinical and demographic characteristics. HPV16/18
were the most commonly detected, but with substantial variation
in viral prevalence between geographic regions. The highest prevalence
of HPV16/18 was observed in South and Central America,
followed by Asia, North America and Europe (adjusted prevalence
rates = 22, 5, 4 and 3%, respectively). Higher HPV16 prevalence
was noted in each geographic region compared with HPV18, except
in North America. HPV16/18-positive lung cancer was less likely
observed among White race (adjusted odds ratio [OR] = 0.33, 95%
confidence interval [CI] = 0.12–0.90), whereas no associations were
observed with gender, smoking history, age, histology or stage.
Comparisons between tumor and normal lung tissue show that
HPV was more likely to be present in lung cancer rather than normal
lung tissues (OR = 3.86, 95% CI = 2.87–5.19). Among a subset
of patients with HPV16-positive tumors, integration was primarily
among female patients (93%, 13/14), while the physical status
in male cases (N = 14) was inconsistent. Our findings confirm that
HPV DNA is present in a small fraction of lung tumors, with large
geographic variations. Further comprehensive analysis is needed to
assess whether this association reflects a causal relationship.
General note
Artículo de publicación ISI
Patrocinador
National Cancer Institute (R03 CA141483 to C.R. and P30
CA006927); Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
Quote Item
Carcinogenesis vol.35 no.6 pp.1267–1275, 2014
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