| Literature DB >> 19555477 |
Ajay Kumar Chaudhary1, Mamta Singh, Shanthy Sundaram, Ravi Mehrotra.
Abstract
Head and neck malignancies are characterized by a multiphasic and multifactorial etiopathogenesis. Tobacco and alcohol consumption are the most common risk factors for head and neck malignancy. Other factors, including DNA viruses, especially human papilloma virus (HPV), may also play a role in the initiation or development of these lesions. The pathways of HPV transmission in the head and neck mucosal lesions include oral-genital contact, more than one sexual partner and perinatal transmission of HPV to the neonatal child. The increase in prevalence of HPV infection in these lesions may be due to wider acceptance of oral sex among teenagers and adults as this is perceived to be a form of safe sex. The prevalence of HPV in benign lesions as well as malignancies has been assessed by many techniques. Among these, the polymerase chain reaction is the most sensitive method. Review of literature reveals that HPV may be a risk factor for malignancies, but not in all cases. For confirmation of the role of HPV in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, large population studies are necessary in an assortment of clinical settings. Prophylactic vaccination against high-risk HPV types eventually may prevent a significant number of cervical carcinomas. Of the two vaccines currently available, Gardasil (Merck & Co., Inc.) protects against HPV types 6, 11, 16 and 18, while the other vaccine, Cervarix (GlaxoSmithKline, Rixensart, Belgium) protects against HPV types 16 and 18 only. However, the HPV vaccine has, to the best of our knowledge, not been tried in head and neck carcinoma. The role of HPV in etiopathogenesis, prevalence in benign and malignant lesions of this area and vaccination strategies are briefly reviewed here.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19555477 PMCID: PMC2706235 DOI: 10.1186/1758-3284-1-22
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Head Neck Oncol ISSN: 1758-3284
Figure 1Mechanisms of HPV-associated oral carcinogenesis.
Figure 2Squamous Epithelial layer showing koilocytosis.
Prevalence of HPV identification in benign lesions of the Head and neck
| Fischer et al [ | 2005 | Different HPV types | Applied broad-spectrum PCR | Benign lesions |
| Castro et al [ | 2006 | 6/11 | Review | Squamous cell papilloma |
| Martins et al [ | 2008 | 6 | HPV typing (PCR), light microscopy and electron microscopy | Laryngeal papillomatosis |
| Förster et al [ | 2008 | 6/11 | PCR | Juvenile laryngeal papillomatosis |
| DeVoti et al [ | 2008 | 6/11 | PCR, micro array | Respiratory papillomas (RP) |
| Kovalenko et al[ | 2009 | 6/11 | IHC | Respiratory papillomatosis |
Prevalence of HPV identification in premalignant lesions of Head and Neck
| Zeuss et al [ | 1991 | 0/20 | 0 | Dysplasia | ISH 6/11, 16/18, 31/33/35 |
| Holladay & Gerald [ | 1993 | 13/45 | 28.9 | Dysplasia, inflammation hyperplasia | E1 PCR |
| Fouret et al [ | 1995 | 0/3 | 0 | Dysplasia | E6 consensus PCR |
| Nielsen et al [ | 1996 | 20/49 | 40.8 | Dysplasia leukoplakias | ISH/HPV 16 PCR, SB PCR |
| Wen et al [ | 1997 | 5/17 | 29.4 | Papilloma, leukoplakias, OLP | E6 HPV 16/18 PCR |
| D'Costa et al [ | 1998 | 27/80 | 33.8 | Leukoplakias, OLP, OSMF | L1 consensus PCR |
| Bouda et al [ | 2000 | 29/34 | 85.2 | Hyperplasia dysplasia | Nested consensus PCR |
| Ha et al [ | 2002 | 1/102 | 1.0 | Dysplasia | Quantitative PCR |
| Ostwald et al [ | 2003 | 72/118 | 22.2 | Oral Leukoplakia | PCR/Southern blot hybridization |
| 65/118 | 15.4 | OLP | |||
| Lo Muzio et al [ | 2004 | 6/7 | 85.7 | Oral leukoplakia | Nested PCR, IHC |
| Campisi et al [ | 2004 | 68/139 | 17.6 | Oral Leukoplakia | PCR |
| 71/139 | 19.7 | OLP | |||
| Chen et al [ | 2006 | 12/23 | 52.6 | OSMF | PCR |
| Furrer et al [ | 2006 | 9/22 | 41 | Potentially malignant and malignant head and neck lesions | PCR- Southern Blot |
| Giovannelli et al [ | 2006 | 50/116 | 22 | Oral leukoplakia | PCR |
| Bagan et al [ | 2007 | 0/13 | 0 | Proliferative verrucous leukoplakia | PCR |
| Luo et al [ | 2007 | 14/46 | 30.4 | Pre-cancerous lesion | Nested PCR, gene-chip arrays |
Prevalence of HPV in malignant lesions of the Head and neck
| Zeuss et al [ | 1991 | SCC | ISH | 0/15 | 0 | - |
| Holladay & Gerald [ | 1993 | SCC | PCR | 7/37 | 19 | 16 & 18 |
| Ostwald et al [ | 1994 | SCC | PCR/SB | 16/26 | 62 | 16 (45%), 18 (35%) 6, 11 (15%) |
| Balaram et al [ | 1995 | SCC | PCR | 67/91 | 74 | 6(13%), 11(20%), 16 (42%) |
| Cruz et al [ | 1996 | SCC | PCR | 19/35 | 55 | 16(79%) |
| Wilczynski et al [ | 1998 | SCC | PCR | 14/21 | 64 | 16(80%), 33(10%), 59(10%) |
| Bustos et al [ | 1999 | SCC | ISH | 09/33 | 27 | 16 |
| van Houten et al [ | 2001 | HNSCC | PCR & T-PCR | 84 | - | High Risk HPV |
| Kojima et al [ | 2002 | SCC | PCR | 35/53 | 66 | 38 |
| Sugiyama et al [ | 2003 | SCC | PCR | 30/86 | 35 | 16 |
| Smith et al [ | 2004 | SCC | PCR | 38/201 | 19 | 16 |
| Koppikar et al [ | 2005 | SCC | PCR | 6/102 | 6 | 16,18 |
| Slebos et al [ | 2006 | SCC | RT-PCR | 8/36 | 22 | 16 |
| Luo et al [ | 2007 | SCC | PCR | 11/51 | 73 | - |
| Zhang et al [ | 2008 | SCC | ISH | 10/30 | 33 | - |
| Chuang et al [ | 2008 | SCC | RT-PCR | 20/59 | 33.9 | 16 |
| Simonato et al[ | 2008 | SCC | - | 5/29 | 17.2 | nested PCR |
| Richards et al [ | 2009 | HNSCC | LOH | - | - | - |
| Gudleviciene et al [ | 2009 | HNSCC | - | - | - | 16 |
Abbreviations: *PCR = Polymerase chain reaction, LOH = Loss of heterozygosity, RT-PCR = Real Time PCR, IHC = Immunohistochemistry, SB = Southern Blotting
Quadrivalent and bivalent human papilloma virus vaccines
| L1 VLP (Gardasil™) base on recombinant yeast technology | 6,11,16 and 18 | Merck o., Inc. Whitehouse Station, NJ |
| L1 VLP (Cevarix™) base on recombinant buculovirus technology | 16 and 18 | Glaxo Smith Kline (GSK) Rixensart, Belgium |