Patients with integrated HPV16 in head and neck cancer show poor survival

•Patients with integrated HPV16 in head and neck cancer show poor survival.•The state of HPV16 has shifted from integrated to episomal.•The overall incidence of HPV in head and neck cancer has leveled off. We previously reported identifying three categories of HPV16-positive head and neck tumors bas...

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Veröffentlicht in:Oral oncology 2018-05, Vol.80, p.52-55
Hauptverfasser: Nulton, Tara J., Kim, Nak-Kyeong, DiNardo, Laurence J., Morgan, Iain M., Windle, Brad
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container_title Oral oncology
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creator Nulton, Tara J.
Kim, Nak-Kyeong
DiNardo, Laurence J.
Morgan, Iain M.
Windle, Brad
description •Patients with integrated HPV16 in head and neck cancer show poor survival.•The state of HPV16 has shifted from integrated to episomal.•The overall incidence of HPV in head and neck cancer has leveled off. We previously reported identifying three categories of HPV16-positive head and neck tumors based on The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) RNA and DNA sequence data. Category 1 had truly integrated HPV16 genomes, category 2 had simple episomal genomes, and category 3 had novel episomes that were a hybrid between viral and human DNA. Using our categorization, we investigated in this study survival of patients with integrated HPV16 tumors versus patients with episomal HPV16 tumors. The TCGA RNA-Seq sequence reads were used to quantify HPV E2 and E7 gene expression, which was used as a marker for HPV integration. The results demonstrate that integration is associated with poor survival; those patients with integrated HPV tumors fared no better than non-HPV tumors in their five-year survival. Integrated HPV in tumors was found strikingly to be prevalent in patients born earlier while episomal HPV was prevalent in patients born later. We also observed a fairly constant incidence of all HPV forms among head and neck cancer patients over the last eight years of this study (2006–2013). We propose our characterization of HPV integrated and episomal state is more accurate than previous studies that may have mischaracterized the hybrid HPV-human DNA episomes as integrated. The state of integrated HPV is associated with a poor clinical outcome. Results suggest that the incidence of integrated HPV among all HPV forms peaked and is decreasing. We discuss the importance of our findings for the management of HPV positive head and neck cancer.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.oraloncology.2018.03.015
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We previously reported identifying three categories of HPV16-positive head and neck tumors based on The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) RNA and DNA sequence data. Category 1 had truly integrated HPV16 genomes, category 2 had simple episomal genomes, and category 3 had novel episomes that were a hybrid between viral and human DNA. Using our categorization, we investigated in this study survival of patients with integrated HPV16 tumors versus patients with episomal HPV16 tumors. The TCGA RNA-Seq sequence reads were used to quantify HPV E2 and E7 gene expression, which was used as a marker for HPV integration. The results demonstrate that integration is associated with poor survival; those patients with integrated HPV tumors fared no better than non-HPV tumors in their five-year survival. Integrated HPV in tumors was found strikingly to be prevalent in patients born earlier while episomal HPV was prevalent in patients born later. We also observed a fairly constant incidence of all HPV forms among head and neck cancer patients over the last eight years of this study (2006–2013). We propose our characterization of HPV integrated and episomal state is more accurate than previous studies that may have mischaracterized the hybrid HPV-human DNA episomes as integrated. The state of integrated HPV is associated with a poor clinical outcome. Results suggest that the incidence of integrated HPV among all HPV forms peaked and is decreasing. 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We also observed a fairly constant incidence of all HPV forms among head and neck cancer patients over the last eight years of this study (2006–2013). We propose our characterization of HPV integrated and episomal state is more accurate than previous studies that may have mischaracterized the hybrid HPV-human DNA episomes as integrated. The state of integrated HPV is associated with a poor clinical outcome. Results suggest that the incidence of integrated HPV among all HPV forms peaked and is decreasing. 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subjects Age
Female
Head and neck cancer
Head and Neck Neoplasms - pathology
Head and Neck Neoplasms - virology
Human papillomavirus
Human papillomavirus 16 - isolation & purification
Humans
Incidence
Male
Middle Aged
Papillomavirus Infections - pathology
Papillomavirus Infections - virology
Plasmids - metabolism
Survival
Survival Analysis
Year of birth
title Patients with integrated HPV16 in head and neck cancer show poor survival
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