AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study addresses the challenge of distinguishing metastatic cervical cancer from new primary tumors in patients with a history of cervical cancer by utilizing HPV molecular genotyping tests.
  • - Researchers analyzed cases from 2010 to 2020 involving patients with cervical cancer and new lesions, employing a specific PCR method to detect high-risk HPV DNA in those lesions.
  • - The findings showed that in most cases, the presence of HPV DNA confirmed cervical cancer metastasis, while one case revealed no HPV, indicating a new primary lung cancer, thus demonstrating the potential efficacy of molecular genotyping in diagnosis.

Article Abstract

Background: Differentiating metastatic cervical cancer from another primary tumor can be difficult in patients with a history of cervical cancer and a distant lesion. The use of routine HPV molecular detection and genotyping tests could help in these cases. The objective of this study was to identify if an easy-to-use HPV molecular genotyping assay would allow differentiating between HPV tumor metastasis and a new independent primary non-HPV-induced tumor.

Materials And Methods: Between 2010 and 2020, we identified patients with a primary cervical carcinoma who also had another secondary lesion. This identification included a clinical and histologic differential diagnosis of metastatic cervical cancer versus a new primary cancer or metastatic cancer from another site. We used a routine multiplex real-time PCR (rt-PCR) Anyplex II HPV28 (Seegene, Seoul, Republic of Korea) to detect the high-risk (HR)-HPV genome in the distant lesions in these patients.

Results: Eight cases of cervical cancer with a new secondary lesion were identified. In seven, HR-HPV DNA was detected in the biopsy of the distant lesion, which confirmed the diagnosis of cervical cancer metastasis. In the remaining case, no HPV was detected in the secondary lung biopsy, confirming the diagnosis of new primary lung cancer.

Conclusion: Our results pave the way for HPV molecular genotyping use in cases of newly diagnosed distant lesions in patients with a history of HPV cervical neoplasia by using a routine diagnosis process to complete the clinical and histologic differential diagnosis when confronted with ambiguous situations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9961249PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jpm13020177DOI Listing

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