New colposcopy terminology was prepared by the Nomenclature Committee of the International Federation of Cervical Pathology and Colposcopy after a critical review of previous terminologies, online discussions, and discussion with national colposcopy societies and individual colposcopists. This document has been expanded to include terminology of both the cervix and vagina. The popular terms "satisfactory colposcopy" and "unsatisfactory colposcopy" have been replaced. The colposcopic examination should be assessed for three variables: 1) adequate or inadequate, with the reason given; 2) squamocolumnar junction visibility; and 3) transformation zone type. Other additions were the localization of the lesion to either inside or outside the transformation zone and determinants of size as well as location of cervical lesions. Two new signs were included in the terminology-the "inner border sign" and "ridge sign." The following definitions have been added: congenital transformation zone, polyp (ectocervical or endocervical), stenosis, congenital anomaly, and posttreatment consequence. In addition, the terminology includes standardization of cervical excision treatment types and cervical excision specimen dimensions. The International Federation of Cervical Pathology and Colposcopy recommends that the 2011 terminology replace all others and be implemented for diagnosis, treatment, and research.
Colposcopically directed cervical punch biopsies from 362 patients were screened by Southern blot hybridization for the presence of DNA of human papillomavirus (HPV) 6, 10, 11, 16, 18, 31 and 33. The biopsies represented original squamous epithelium, epithelium of metaplastic origin, different stages of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) and invasive carcinomas. HPV6/11, 16, 18 and 31 were detected in 2.9% to 13.7% of histologically normal epithelia. HPV6/11 prevailed in CIN I. HPV16 was clearly more abundant than other HPV types in high-grade CIN and invasive cancers (50%-60%), compared with healthy epithelium. Restriction enzyme cleavage analysis of DNA from primary cancers and corresponding metastases proved the stable association of HPV16 DNA with invasive tumor cells. Preliminary follow-up studies of CIN II patients suggested that HPV16-associated lesions are relatively more likely to persist or to progress. Taken together, the data support the notion of a higher oncogenic potential of HPV16.
Human papillomavirus (HPV) 16 is most prevalent in cervical cancers and also persists in metastases. We examined HPV16-DNA-positive primary cancers and several lymph nodes from each of 14 patients to evaluate the use of HPV16 DNA as a diagnostic marker for the detection of early node involvement. The HPV16 DNA was exclusively integrated in 39% of the primary cancers, predominantly episomal in 36%, and integrated and extrachromosomal to a similar extent in 25%. Thirteen of 16 involved lymph nodes contained HPV16 sequences. Integrated viral DNA showed the same pattern in primary tumors and in metastases. The level of extrachromosomal HPV16 DNA, however, appeared to be considerably reduced in some nodes. HPV16 DNA was also detected in 18 out of 59 histologically negative lymph nodes. This result recommends nucleic acid hybridization as a sensitive method for the detection of HPV-DNA-positive cancer cells. The prognostic significance of viral sequences in histologically negative nodes remains to be established.
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