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High-Risk HPV Associated With Improved Survival in Cervical Cancer

by Iswarya on Oct 5 2018 5:07 PM

High-Risk HPV Associated With Improved Survival in Cervical Cancer
Presence of HPV (human high-risk papillomavirus) in the examination of invasive cervical cancer improved the diagnosis compared with if high-risk HPV cannot be detected in a tumor, reports a new study. The findings of the study are published in the journal PLOS Medicine.
High-risk human papillomavirus (hrHPV) is the leading cause of cervical cancer. However, whether the presence of hrHPV in the tumor tissue is of significance to the prognosis has been unclear.

In this present study, researchers at Karolinska Institutet have therefore looked into a possible correlation between the presence of hrHPV in a tumor and survival rates for invasive cervical cancer (i.e., cervical cancer that has spread to surrounding tissues).

The researchers gathered information on all cases of invasive cervical cancer in Sweden between the years 2002 and 2011 (4,254 confirmed cases in total). They then collected HPV data from the regional biobanks for 2,845 of these women and compared survival data from national registers.

Their results show that the five-year relative survival rate for women with hrHPV-positive tumors was 74 percent compared with the female population of the same age and during the same calendar year, while it was only 54 percent for women with hrHPV-negative tumors.

HrHPV could be identified in just over 80 percent of the tumors. Women with hrHPV-positive tumors were more likely to be discovered through screening, were younger and had a high socioeconomic status. They were also discovered at an earlier clinical stage than women with hrHPV-negative tumors. After having controlled for age, tumor type, tumor stage at diagnosis and educational background, the researchers found, however, that women with hrHPV-positive tumors still had a much lower risk of dying than the women with hrHPV-negative tumors.

"The presence of hrHPV in invasive tumor tissue is thus a strong and yet routinely accessible prognostic biomarker for the prognosis of invasive cervical cancer and could be a useful complement to the established prognostic tools currently in use," says co-author Pär Sparén, professor at the Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Karolinska Institutet.

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The underlying biological mechanisms for why the lack of detectable hrHPV in a tumor gives a much worse prognosis are unknown and need to be interrogated further.

The study was financed by the Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research, the Swedish Cancer Society, the Swedish Research Council, and the China Scholarship Council. Co-author Joakim Dillner has received grants from Roche and Genomica for research on the HPV test. Bengt Andrae was a member of the National Board of Health and Welfare's expert panel on HPV-based screening for cervical cancer in 2015.

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Source-Eurekalert


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