Prevalence of human papillomavirus and implication on survival in Chinese penile cancer

AbstractWe assessed the prevalence of HPV DNA in a large series of Chinese penile cancer and examine its association with the histological subtype, p16INK4a expression, and prognosis. We pathologically categorized 226 invasive penile squamous cell carcinomas and assessed HPV genotyping by real-time PCR and p16INK4a immunohistochemistry. The results were correlated with histopathological and clinical parameters and disease-specific survival (DSS). HPV DNA was detected in 32.7% (74/226) of penile cancer cases. The most frequent genotype was HPV 16 (64/74, 86.5%), followed by HPV 18 (6/74, 8.1%). Fifty-nine (26.1%) cases were positive for the p16INK4a expression, and p16INK4a expression had a sensitivity of 56.8% (95% CI, 45.2 –68.3%) and a specificity of 88.8% (95% CI, 83.8–93.9%) for defining HPV status. HPV DNA (P = 0.019), p16INK4a (P = 0.038), age (P = 0.018), grade of differentiation (P = 0.001), lymph nodes (P <  0.001), T stage (P <  0.001), M stage (P <  0.001), and lymphovascular invasion (LVI,P = 0.001) were prognostic factors for DSS. HPV-positivity (HR 0.334; 95% CI, 0.158–0.705,P = 0.004) was still a significant prognostic factor for DSS in the multivariate Cox regression model. HPV DNA was observed in one third of Chinese penile carcinoma cases. The p16INK4a expression can indicate high-risk human papillomavirus (HR-HPV). HPV-positive penile tumors confer a survival be nefit over HPV-negative tumors.
Source: Virchows Archiv - Category: Pathology Source Type: research