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Human papillomavirus prevalence and type distribution in penile carcinoma. | LitMetric

Human papillomavirus prevalence and type distribution in penile carcinoma.

J Clin Pathol

Unit of Infections and Cancer (UNIC), Cancer Epidemiology Research Program, Institut Català d' Oncologia, IDIBELL, L' Hospitalet de Ll, Barcelona, Spain.

Published: October 2009

AI Article Synopsis

  • Penile carcinoma is a rare and severe type of cancer with various causes, where Human papillomavirus (HPV) plays a significant role in many cases, particularly linked to certain histological types.
  • A systematic review analyzed 31 studies from 1986 to June 2008, finding a global HPV prevalence of 46.9% in penile carcinomas, predominantly linked to HPV-16 and HPV-18.
  • The findings suggest that a notable proportion of penile cancers are associated with HPV, highlighting the potential effectiveness of existing HPV vaccines in preventing these tumors.

Article Abstract

Background: Penile carcinoma is an uncommon and potentially mutilating disease with a heterogeneous aetiology. Several risk factors have been established for its development. Human papillomavirus (HPV) infection seems to play an important role in the development of a subset of these carcinomas and its presence is thought to be related to the histological type. HPV prevalence in penile tumours is reported to be associated to a variety of morphological changes. Its determination will provide a better estimate for HPV related cancer burden and its preventable fraction.

Methods: A systematic and comprehensive literature review of the major penile cancer studies published from 1986 until June 2008 evaluating the HPV prevalence among the different histological types was carried out.

Results: 31 studies including 1466 penile carcinomas were reviewed. Global HPV prevalence was 46.9%. Relative contribution was: HPV-16 (60.23%), HPV-18 (13.35%), HPV-6/11 (8.13%), HPV-31 (1.16%), HPV-45 (1.16%), HPV-33 (0.97%), HPV-52 (0.58%), other types (2.47%). Assessment of multiple infections contribution is limited due to study design. Basaloid and warty squamous cell carcinomas were the most frequent HPV-related histological types, but keratinising and non-keratinising subtypes also showed prevalence rates of around 50%.

Conclusions: About half of the penile tumours were associated with HPV 16-18 with little presence of other genotypes. Research on the mechanisms behind penile carcinogenesis is warranted. Available HPV vaccines are likely to be effective in penile tumours.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jcp.2008.063149DOI Listing

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