In patients with FA, there is a high incidence of aggressive HNSCC at a young age. Surgery remains the mainstay of treatment because patients with FA tolerate radiation therapy and chemotherapy poorly, with significant morbidity. An increased understanding of FA-associated malignancies is not only important in the clinical management of patients with FA but can also elucidate the role of chromosomal instability in the development of HNSCC in general.
Fanconi anemia is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by congenital malformations, bone marrow failure, and the development of squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs) and other cancers. Recent clinicopathologic evidence has raised the possibility that an environmental factor such as human papillomavirus (HPV) may be involved in the pathogenesis of SCCs in Fanconi anemia patients. Given the high prevalence of p53 mutations in SCCs among the general population and the lack of p53 mutations in HPV-related carcinogenesis, we evaluated the role of HPV and p53 mutations and polymorphisms in SCC from Fanconi anemia patients. We used polymerase chain reaction (PCR) screening and real-time PCR to detect and quantify HPV DNA in DNA extracted from microdissected SCCs obtained from 24 Fanconi anemia patients (n = 25 SCCs; case subjects) and 50 age-, sex-, and tumor site-matched SCC patients without Fanconi anemia (n = 50 SCCs; control subjects). We PCR-amplified and sequenced exons 4-9 of the p53 gene from SCC DNA. We detected HPV DNA in 84% of the SCC specimens from the case subjects and in 36% of the SCC specimens from the control subjects (P<.001). The prevalence of p53 mutations in SCCs from the case subjects (0%, 0/25) was statistically significantly lower than that of SCCs from the control subjects (36%, 12/33; P<.001). A greater proportion of patients with Fanconi anemia and SCC were homozygous for Arg72, a p53 polymorphism that may be associated with increased risk for HPV-associated human malignancies, than an ethnically-matched cohort of Fanconi anemia patients without SCC (75% versus 51%; P =.05). These data suggest that Fanconi anemia is associated with increased susceptibility to HPV-induced carcinogenesis.
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