| Literature DB >> 30821126 |
Miriam Reuschenbach1, Ingeborg Tinhofer2,3, Claus Wittekindt4, Steffen Wagner4, Jens Peter Klussmann5.
Abstract
The prevalence of oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OPSCC) is increasing globally while the prevalence of other head and neck cancers is decreasing. The most likely reasons for this are a decreasing influence of smoking and the growing relevance of infections with the human papilloma virus (HPV) as a risk factor. A rise in the HPV-attributable fraction (HPV-AF) of OPSCC has been observed in many countries, yet a comprehensive review of prevalence rates and trends in Germany is lacking. To determine the current HPV-AF of OPSCC in Germany and to assess whether it has changed during the last decades, we performed a systematic literature review. We screened Medline and EMBASE for studies that reported the tumor HPV status of newly diagnosed OPSCC patients treated at medical centers in Germany by testing for both HPV DNA and p16INK4a overexpression to confirm involvement of HPV in tumorigenesis. Out of 287 screened studies, 14 studies with data from a total of 1819 OPSCC patients treated between 1988 and 2015 were included in the data synthesis. The reported average HPV-AF varied considerably between the studies, ranging from 11.5% (1988-2008) to 55.0% (2004-2009). Two of the included studies did not only provide the HPV-AF for the entire observed calendar period but also for separate years, allowing to more accurately assess changes over time. These studies reported increases in the HPV-AF from 21% in 2000 to 53% in 2015 and from 38% in 2004 to 71% in 2013, respectively.Entities:
Keywords: Germany; HNC; HPV; OPSCC; prevalence
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30821126 PMCID: PMC6488137 DOI: 10.1002/cam4.2039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Med ISSN: 2045-7634 Impact factor: 4.452
PICOTS criteria for study inclusion
| Inclusion criteria | |
|---|---|
| Population | At least 10 patients with newly diagnosed OPSCC (including oropharyngeal sublocations such as tonsil) and treated at a German medical center |
| Intervention | HPV status determined by HPV DNA PCR combined with p16INK4a immunohistochemistry on pretreatment tumor biopsies |
| Comparisons | None |
| Outcome | HPV‐attributable fraction (prevalence of HPV DNA PCR and p16INK4a positive OPSCC) |
| Time | All eligible studies will be included regardless of publication time or study duration, if they were retrievable by the searched databases by January 10, 2018 |
| Study design | Prospective and retrospective studies including patients with newly diagnosed OPSCC without evident selection for eg stage or histology |
| Other | None |
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram of the process of study selection
HPV prevalence and methodical details of the identified studies (FF=fresh frozen, FFPE=formalin‐fixed paraffin‐embedded)
|
Study (year of publication) | City | Calendar period | Case selection | OPSCC evaluable for HPV, n | OPSCC positive for HPV DNA/p16INK4a, n | OPSCC positive for HPV DNA/p16INK4a, % | HPV DNA detection method, (material, primers, read‐out) | p16INK4a detection method, (material, antibody clone, positive definition) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Reimers (2007) | Cologne | 1997‐2002 | Consecutive patients with newly diagnosed and histologically confirmed OPSCC | 96 | 25 | 26.0 | FF, A5/A10 and A6/A8, electrophoresis | FFPE, 16P04, strong and diffuse cytoplasmic and nuclear staining |
|
Hoffmann (2010) | Kiel | 2004‐2007 | During surgery | 39 | 11 | 28.2 | FF, MY09/11 and GP5/GP6, multiplex genotyping (Luminex) and Southern blot | FFPE, E6H4, strong nuclear and cytoplasmic staining,> 25% |
|
Hoffmann (2012) | Kiel | 2004‐2009 | During surgery | 20 | 11 | 55.0 | FF, GP51/GP61 and MY09/11 plus a proprietary primer set, multiplex genotyping (Luminex) and PCR microarray | FFPE, E6H4, strong nuclear and cytoplasmic staining,> 25% |
|
Holzinger (2012) | Heidelberg | 1990‐2008 | Patients diagnosed with primary OPSCC and treated at the ENT department | 178 | 42 | 23.6 | FF, GP5+6+,multiplex genotyping (Luminex) | TMA, E6H4 and DSC‐106, strong nuclear and cytoplasmic staining in the proliferating tumor cells |
|
Maier (2013) | Ulm | 2001‐2012 | Patients treated at the ENT department | 102 | 30 | 29.4 | FFPE, MY09/11 plus a proprietary primer set, PCR microarray | FFPE, E6H4, strong nuclear and cytoplasmic staining |
|
Tahtali (2013) | Frankfurt | 1988‐2008 | Patients with primary tumors of the oropharynx treated at the ENT department | 104 | 12 | 11.5 | FF, MY09/11, electrophoresis | FF, E6H4, na |
|
Weiss (2013) | Münster | < 2013 | Patients diagnosed and treated at the ENT department | 59 | 28 | 47.5 | FF and FFPE, GP5+6+,na | FFPE, E6H4, strong and diffuse nuclear and cytoplasmic staining |
|
Lörincz (2014) | Hamburg | 2011‐2013 | Patients selected for TORS | 35 | 12 | 34.3 | na, na, na | na, na, na |
|
Meyer (2014) | Cologne | 2000‐2005 | Curative resection at ENT department | 93 | 25 | 26.9 | FF and FFPE, A5/A10 and A6/A8, electrophoresis | FFPE, 16P04, strong nuclear and cytoplasmic staining |
|
Quabius (2014) | Kiel | 2012 | During surgery at the ENT department | 19 | 5 | 26.3 | FF, MY09/11 and GP51/GP61, electrophoresis and Sanger sequencing | FFPE, E6H4, 30%, moderate 31‐75% and strong> 75% |
|
Tinhofer (2015) | Berlin | 2004‐2013 | Patients who had been treated at the radiation oncology department within the last 10 years | 227 | 91 | 40.1 | na, GP5+6+, multiplex genotyping (Luminex) | na, E6H4, strong nuclear staining in> 70% cells |
|
Hauck (2015) | Berlin | 1997‐2011 | Selected from pathology, according to availability of paraffin blocks | 122 | 42 | 34.4 | FFPE, GP5+6+, electrophoresis and Sanger sequencing | FFPE, E6H4, > 70% of neoplastic cells strong nuclear and/or cytoplasmic staining |
|
Hoffmann (2018) | Kiel | 2002‐2010 | During panendoscopy or surgery at the ENT | 126 | 48 | 38.1 | FFPE, MY09/11 and GP51/GP61, electrophoresis and Sanger sequencing | FFPE, E6H4, strong diffuse staining |
|
Würdemann (2017) | Giessen | 2000‐2015 | Patients diagnosed between 01/01/2000 and 07/15/2016 and sufficient tumor material available | 599 | 150 | 25.0 | FFPE, GP5+6+, multiplex genotyping (Luminex) | FFPE, E6H4, diffuse staining |
Figure 2Bubble plot of the reported HPV‐AF of OPSCC as a function of the median year of the observed time period. Each bubble represents an individual study. Bubble area corresponds to the number of patients included in the study, ranging from 19 patients (smallest bubble) to 599 patients (largest bubble)
Figure 3Changes in the HPV‐AF of OPSCC in two German cohorts observed between 2004‐2013 (empty circles)19 and 2000‐2015 (filled circles).23 The dashed trend line was derived by linear regression
Figure 4Funnel plot of study precision (number of included patients) vs primary outcome (HPV‐AF). The dotted line indicates the mean value