| Literature DB >> 35117975 |
Melissa Bersanelli1, Chiara Casartelli1, Sebastiano Buti1, Camillo Porta2.
Abstract
Virus-related cancers in humans are widely recognized, but in the case of renal cancer, the link with the world of viruses is not clearly established in humans, despite being known in animal biology. In the present review, we aimed to explore the literature on renal cell carcinoma (RCC) for a possible role of viruses in human RCC tumorigenesis and immune homeostasis, hypothesizing the contribution of viruses to the immunogenicity of this tumor. A scientific literature search was conducted using the PubMed, Web of Science, and Google Scholar databases with the keywords "virus" or "viruses" or "viral infection" matched with ("AND") "renal cell carcinoma" or "kidney cancer" or "renal cancer" or "renal carcinoma" or "renal tumor" or "RCC". The retrieved findings evidenced two main aspects testifying to the relationship between RCC and viruses: The presence of viruses within the tumor, especially in non-clear cell RCC cases, and RCC occurrence in cases with pre-existing chronic viral infections. Some retrieved translational and clinical data suggest the possible contribution of viruses, particularly Epstein-Barr virus, to the marked immunogenicity of sarcomatoid RCC. In addition, it was revealed the possible role of endogenous retrovirus reactivation in RCC oncogenesis, introducing new fascinating hypotheses about this tumor's immunogenicity and likeliness of response to immune checkpoint inhibitors. ©The Author(s) 2022. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Kidney cancer; Renal cancer; Renal cell carcinoma; Retrotransposons; Viral infections; Viruses
Year: 2022 PMID: 35117975 PMCID: PMC8790307 DOI: 10.5527/wjn.v11.i1.1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Nephrol ISSN: 2220-6124
Studies about viruses in renal cell carcinoma
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| Kim | Retrospective | 73 RCC (22 clear cell; 18 papillary; 20 chromophobe; 10 sarcomatoid; 3 oncocytoma) | 18 non-neoplastic kidneys | EBV | EBER-ISH and PCRs (for EBNA-1 and EBNA-3C) | 5/73 (all sarcomatoid histology) (EBER-ISH) | 0/18 |
| Neirynck | Case report | 1 RCC | 1 peritumoral tissue | BKV | IHC (for SV40 T antigen) | 65%-70% neoplastic cells | < 1% non-neoplastic cells |
| Salehipoor | Retrospective | 49 RCC | 16 non-neoplastic kidneys | HPV; EBV; BKV; JCV | Nested PCR (virus DNA) | 7/49 HPV (5 clear cell; 1 chromophobe 1 mixed type) 0 EBV, BKV JCV | 0/16 |
| Bulut | Retrospective | 50 RCC | 45 non-neoplastic kidneys | BKV | Nested PCR (BKV DNA) and RT-PCR (BKV mRNA) | 10/50 (Nested PCR) 8/50 (RT-PCR) | 2/45 non neoplastic kidneys (nested PCR, RT-PCR) |
| Farhadi | Retrospective | 122 RCC (77 conventional; 26 papillary; 14 chromophobe; 1 collecting duct; 4 unclassified) | 96 peritumoral tissues, 19 non-neoplastic kidneys | HR-HPV | Nested PCR (HR-HPV DNA). IHC (for p16INK4a and L1 Capsid Protein); CSAC-ISH | 37/122 (17 clear-cell; 13 papillary; 4 chromophobe; 3 unclassified) (PCR). 24/118 (IHC for p16INK4a | 4/96 peritumoral tissues; 0/19 non-neoplastic kidneys (PCR); 16/94 peritumoral tissue (IHC for p16INK4a); 0/94 peritumoral tissue (IHC for L1 capsid protein); NA (CSAC-ISH) |
Allograft kidney.
EBER-positive signals were located only in the tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes.
Human papillomavirus capsid protein.
RCC: Renal cell carcinoma; BKV: BK virus; EBV: Epstein-Barr virus; HPV: Human papillomavirus; JCV: JC virus; HR-HPV: High-risk human papillomavirus; Nested PCR: Nested polymerase chain reaction; RT-PCR: Real-time polymerase chain reaction; IHC: Immunohistochemistry; EBER-ISH: EBV-encoded RNAs in situ hybridization; EBNA-1 and EBNA-3C: EBV-encoded nuclear antigen 1 and EBV-encoded nuclear antigen 3C; CSAC-ISH: Catalyzed signal-amplified colorimetric in situ hybridization; NA: Not available.
Studies reporting the relationship between chronic viral infections and the occurrence of renal cell carcinoma
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| Gaughan | Case series | HIV infection | 9 HIV-associated RCC | 2 papillary, 1 collecting duct, 6 clear cell | 48 | To describe the risk factors, clinical findings, pathology, and response to therapy in RCC patients infected with HIV | The clinical presentation and behavior of RCC in patients with HIV infection appeared similar to that of the HIV-negative population and that chronic immunosuppression plays a lesser role than age and exposure to risk factors |
| Gordon | Retrospective study | HCV infection | 67063 HCV-tested patients: 3057 HCV+ and 64006 HCV- | 17 RCC HCV+: 8 clear cell, 6 papillary, 2 mixed clear cell/papillary, 1 undifferentiated/other; 117 HCV-: 92 clear cell, 43 papillary, 9 mixed clear cell/papillary, 26 undifferentiated/other | 54 in HCV+, 63 in HCV- | To determine whether HCV infection confers an increased risk for developing RCC | RCC was diagnosed in 0.6% (17/3057) of HCV+ and 0.3% (117/64006) of HCV- patients. HCV infection confers a risk for the development of RCC: Overall HR for RCC among HCV patients 1.77 (95% confidence interval, 1.05-2.98; |
| Wiwanitkit[ | Bioinformatics analysis | HCV infection | NA | NA | NA | To assess the cause–outcome relationship between HCV infection and RCC using the bioinformatics network analysis technique | There might be a cause–outcome relationship between HCV infection and RCC via NY-REN-54 (the only one common protein) |
| Gonzalez | Prospective study | HCV infection | 140 RCC and 100 colon cancer patients (control) | NA | 56.7 in RCC patients with viremia, 61.8 in aviremic patients | To determine whether chronic HCV is associated with an increased risk of RCC | 11/140 RCC and 1/100 colon cancer patients were HCAB+. Of the HCAB+ patients, 9/11 RCC and 0/1 controls had detectable HCV RNA. In the multivariable logistic regression analysis, being HCV RNA positive was a significant risk factor for RCC ( |
| Wijarnpreecha | Systematic review and meta-analysis | HCV infection | 196826 patients from 7 observational studies (4 cohort and 3 case-control studies). Individuals without HCV infection were used as comparators in cohort studies, individuals without RCC as comparators in the cross-sectional and case-control studies | NA | NA | To assess the risk of RCC in patients with HCV infection | Significantly increased risk of RCC in HCC+ with the pooled risk ratio of 1.86 (95%CI: 1.11-3.11) |
| Ong | Case series | HIV infection | 7 HIV-associated RCC | 5 clear cell, 1 papillary, 1 unknown | 56 | To report presentation, management and outcomes of RCC patients with HIV infection | RCC patients with HIV infection should be offered all treatment options in the same manner as the general population |
| Tsimafeyeu | Retrospective study | HCV infection | 44 mRCC patients: 22 HCV+, 22 HCV- | Clear cell | 62 in mRCC HCV+, 63 in mRCC HCV- | To evaluate Nivolumab efficacy and safety in mRCC patients with or without chronic HCV infection (OS primary endpoint, PFS, ORR and rate of grade 3–4 adverse events secondary endpoints) | HCV-infected patients had significantly longer OS (27.5 |
Human immunodeficiency virus infection before renal cell carcinoma (RCC) diagnosis.
Mean age not specified, but hepatitis C virus (HCV)+ RCC patients were significantly younger than HCV-RCC patients.
HCV: Hepatitis C virus; RCC: Renal cell carcinoma; mRCC: Metastatic renal cell carcinoma; HR: Hazard ratio; NA: Not available; HCAB: Hepatitis C antibody; RNA: Ribonucleic acid; OS: Overall survival; PFS: Progression-free survival; ORR: Objective response rate; HIV: Human immunodeficiency virus.
Figure 1The crosstalk between the virus, the host, and the tumor is likely to influence the mutual interplay between the tumor itself, its immune microenvironment, and the host with renal cell carcinoma.