A case study of human papillomavirus-associated bladder carcinoma developing after urethral condyloma acuminatum

We report a 35-year-old man with bladder carcinoma developing 2 months after urethral condyloma acuminatum, with an 8-year history of persistent human papilloma virus-58 infection in the urinary tract. DNA was extracted from paraffin-embedded tissue specimens. Human papilloma virus-6 and -58 were de...

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Veröffentlicht in:Japanese journal of clinical oncology 2012-05, Vol.42 (5), p.455-458
Hauptverfasser: Kawaguchi, Shohei, Shigehara, Kazuyoshi, Sasagawa, Toshiyuki, Kuribayashi, Masato, Junicho, Akira, Hasegawa, Toru, Maeda, Yuji, Namiki, Mikio
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We report a 35-year-old man with bladder carcinoma developing 2 months after urethral condyloma acuminatum, with an 8-year history of persistent human papilloma virus-58 infection in the urinary tract. DNA was extracted from paraffin-embedded tissue specimens. Human papilloma virus-6 and -58 were detected in the condyloma, whereas human papilloma virus-58 was detected in the carcinoma. In situ hybridization analysis also demonstrated high-risk human papilloma virus-DNA signals in the condyloma and carcinoma tissues. Immunohistochemistry showed that p16-INK4a and mcm-7, surrogate markers of oncogenic human papilloma virus E7 protein, were weakly expressed in the condyloma tissue but were strongly expressed in the carcinoma tissues, suggesting that human papilloma virus-58 was present in the episomal state in the condyloma, whereas human papilloma virus-58 DNA was integrated into the host cells and its infection may have a role in the development of bladder carcinoma. Human papilloma virus-58 was continuously detected in the urethral brushing samples 8 years after treatment for urethral condyloma, and human papilloma virus-58 infection was still persistent in the urethra.
ISSN:0368-2811
1465-3621
DOI:10.1093/jjco/hys024