| Literature DB >> 27747193 |
James Sutherland Lawson1, Wendy K Glenn1, Noel James Whitaker1.
Abstract
High risk human papilloma viruses (HPVs) may have a causal role in some breast cancers. Case-control studies, conducted in many different countries, consistently indicate that HPVs are more frequently present in breast cancers as compared to benign breast and normal breast controls (odds ratio 4.02). The assessment of causality of HPVs in breast cancer is difficult because (i) the HPV viral load is extremely low, (ii) HPV infections are common but HPV associated breast cancers are uncommon, and (iii) HPV infections may precede the development of breast and other cancers by years or even decades. Further, HPV oncogenesis can be indirect. Despite these difficulties, the emergence of new evidence has made the assessment of HPV causality, in breast cancer, a practical proposition. With one exception, the evidence meets all the conventional criteria for a causal role of HPVs in breast cancer. The exception is "specificity." HPVs are ubiquitous, which is the exact opposite of specificity. An additional reservation is that the prevalence of breast cancer is not increased in immunocompromised patients as is the case with respect to HPV-associated cervical cancer. This indicates that HPVs may have an indirect causal influence in breast cancer. Based on the overall evidence, high-risk HPVs may have a causal role in some breast cancers.Entities:
Keywords: HPV; breast cancer; causality; human papilloma virus
Year: 2016 PMID: 27747193 PMCID: PMC5040724 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2016.00207
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
HPV viral loads in HeLa (cervical cancer cell line), breast cancer tissues, and cervical cancer tissues (.
| HeLa cells | Breast cancer | Cervical cancer | |
|---|---|---|---|
| HPV gene copy/cell | 10–50 | 0.00054–0.0021 | 13 |
| HPV gene copy/ng | 1,510–7,558 | 0.082–0.32 | 2,000 |
| HPV gene copy/50 ng | 75,500–377,000 | 4–16 | 98,500 |
The viral load is approximately 2,000-fold greater in cervical cancer as compared to breast cancer.
ng = nanogram.
Figure 1(A) HPV identified by in situ PCR in breast ductal carcinoma in situ. Koilocytes are present in this specimen. (B,C) HPV E7 protein in a benign breast specimen (B). No HPV E7 protein in invasive breast cancer 4 years later in the same patient (C).
Identification of high-risk HPVs in breast cancer and benign or normal breast controls in case–control studies.
| Reference | Country | HPV-positive breast cancers/total breast cancers | HPV-positive non-cancer breast/total non-cancer breast controls | Main HPV types |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yu et al. ( | Japan/China | 18/52 (35%) | 0/15 (0%) | 18, 33 |
| Damin et al. ( | Brazil | 25/101 (25%) | 0/41 (0%) | 16, 18 |
| Tsai et al. ( | Taiwan | 8/62 (13%) | 2/42 (5%) | Not available |
| Choi et al. ( | Korea | 8/123 (7%) | 0/31 (0%) | 16, 18, 58 |
| Gumus et al. ( | Turkey | 37/50 (74%) | 9/16 (56%) | 18, 33 |
| He et al. ( | China | 24/40 (60%) | 1/20 (5%) | 16 |
| de Leon et al. ( | Mexico | 15/41 (37%) | 0/43 (0%) | 16, 18 |
| Heng et al. ( | Australia | 8/26 (31%) | 3/28 (11%) | 16, 18 |
| Herrera-Romano et al. ( | Mexico | 6/60 (10%) | 7/60 (12%) | 16 |
| Mou et al. ( | China | 4/62 (6%) | 0/46 (0%) | 16, 18 |
| Chang et al. ( | China | 0/48 (0%) | 3/30 (10%) | 6, 11 |
| Sigaroodi et al. ( | Iran | 15/43 (35%) | 1/40 (3%) | 16, 18 |
| Frega et al. ( | Italy | 9/31 (29%) | 0/12 (0%) | 16, 18 |
| Glenn et al. ( | Australia | 25/50 (50%) | 8/40 (20%) | 16, 18 |
| Liang et al. ( | China | 48/224 (21%) | 6/37 (16%) | 16, 18, 33, 58 |
| Ahangar-Oskouee et al. ( | Iran | 22/65 (34%) | 0/65 (0%) | 16 |
| Ali et al. ( | Iraq | 60/129 (47%) | 3/41 (7%) | 16, 18, 33 |
| Eslamifar et al. ( | Iran | 0/100 (0%) | 0/50 (0%) | |
| Manzouri et al. ( | Iran | 10/55 (18%) | 7/51 (14%) | 16 |
| Peng et al. ( | China | 2/100 (2%) | 0/50 (0%) | 18 |
| Fu et al. ( | China | 25/169 (15%) | 1/83 (1%) | 58 |
| Li et al. ( | China | 3/187 (2%) | 0/92 (0%) | 6, 16, 18 |
| Zhou et al. ( | China | 0/77 (0%) | 0/77 (0%) | |
| Vernet-Tomas et al. ( | Spain | 0/76 (0%) | 0/2 (0%) |
These data indicate that high-risk HPVs are fourfold more prevalent in breast tumors as compared to non-cancer controls. This parallels the findings of a recent meta-analysis based on selected studies included in this Table (.
Incidence and mortality per 100,000 women (age adjusted) of cervical and breast cancers.
| Incidence cervical cancer | Incidence breast cancer | Mortality cervical cancer | Mortality breast cancer | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| France | 8 | 92 | 2 | 17 |
| England | 7 | 90 | 2 | 18 |
| United States | 5 | 84 | 4 | 14 |
| Australia | 5 | 82 | 2 | 14 |
| Canada | 5 | 76 | 3 | 15 |
| China | 6 | 44 | 5 | 5 |
| India | 16 | 32 | 10 | 10 |
| Japan | 7 | 32 | 4 | 8 |
| Thailand | 23 | 25 | 10 | 10 |
Selected high and low cervical cancer country data (.
Low cervical cancer correlates with higher breast cancer incidence and mortality (incidence .