A single positive finding of HPV DNA in a Pap smear confers an increased risk of future invasive cervical cancer that is positive for the same type of virus as identified earlier.
Persistent human papillomavirus (HPV) infection is an established cause of cervical cancer, but the role of other sexually transmitted agents, most notably Chlamydia trachomatis, has not been well defined. The women participating in the population-based cervical cancer screening program in Västerbotten county of Northern Sweden were followed up for up to 26 years to identify 118 women who developed cervical cancer after having had a normal Pap smear (on average 5.6 years later; range 0.5 months-26 years). As controls, we selected another 118 women who were matched by birth cohort, time-point of sampling of the baseline normal smear and who had a normal smear at the time when the corresponding case was diagnosed with cancer. The Pap smears and cervical cancer biopsies were analyzed by PCR for C. trachomatis DNA and for HPV DNA. At baseline, C. trachomatis DNA was present in 8% of cases but not among any one of the controls. The relative risk for cervical cancer associated with past C. trachomatis infection, adjusted for concomitant HPV DNA positivity, was 17.1 (95% CI 2.6 -ؕ).The presence of C. trachomatis and of HPV were not interrelated. Whereas C. trachomatis was primarily found in specimens taken many years before cancer diagnosis, HPV DNA was associated with a short lag time before cancer diagnosis. Whereas most women who were HPV DNA-positive in the prediagnostic smear were also positive for the same virus in the cervical cancer biopsy, none of the women were positive for C. trachomatis in both the prediagnostic smear and in the subsequent cervical cancer. In conclusion, a prior cervical C. trachomatis infection was associated with an increased risk for development of invasive cervical cancer.
The development of cervical carcinoma is closely associated with HPV infection. However, other genetic alterations also play an important role. In this study, we analyzed copy number alterations of several oncogene loci in a panel of 84 cervical tumors. Sixty-five (77%) tumors were HPV DNA-positive, and most were infected with type 16 or type 18 or both. The oncogenes studied include PIK3CA at 3q26.3, TERT at 5p15.33, C-MYC at 8q24, CCND1 at 11q13.3, ERBB2 at 17q21.2 and locus region 20q13.2. Amplification of 1 or more genes was detected in 55 (65%) cases using interphase FISH. PIK3CA was amplified in 43% of tumors, followed by TERT (33%), 20q13.2 (30%), ERBB2 (29%), C-MYC (25%) and CCND1 (12%). Most tumors showed low-level amplification with 3-7 copies of these genes, and complex changes involving 3 or more genes occur more frequently in tumors at advanced stages. Increased protein expression of c-erbB2 and c-myc was observed in tumors with the corresponding gene amplification. Oncogene alterations were found more often in HPV-infected cases, particularly for C-MYC and TERT. These findings indicate that HPV-associated cervical carcinomas bear frequent alterations of these genes, which may have critical biologic impact on the development and progression of carcinoma of the uterine cervix.
The aim is to evaluate LRIG1 as a prognosis predictor and correlations to cofactors in squamous cell cervical cancer. LRIG1 expression was studied in 128 cervical carcinomas and was compared with expression of nine other tumor markers. Smoking history was registered and pretreatment serum estradiol and progesterone levels were evaluated in 79 women. At clinical stage IB, 58% of the tumors showed LRIG1 expression, but there was a decline by increasing stage (33% in stage IV). Ninety percent of women with stage IB cancer and LRIG1 positivity survived, as compared to 64% without expression (P = 0.02). LRIG1 expression did not predict prognosis in advanced stages, but in stage IIA there was a marked relative difference, with 75% survival in tumors expressing LRIG1, as compared to 43% in those without. No correlation was found between LRIG1 and the other nine tumor markers studied. A high serum progesterone and smoking correlated to absent LRIG1 expression. We conclude that LRIG1 appears to be a significant prognosis predictor in early-stage cervical cancer, independent of the other tumor markers that were studied. Diminished expression in advanced stages and the inverse correlation to serum progesterone and smoking indicates that LRIG1 is a tumor suppressor in cervix.
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