“…Multiple authors have suggested that vulvar cancer comprises two separate diseases, the first type occurring with high prevalence among young women and developing from vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia caused by HPV, and a second type afflicting older women and developing from non-neoplastic epithelial disorders such as lichen sclerosus or chronic inflammation. [2][3][4]12,13,15,18,24,25 However, these studies of HPV prevalence in invasive squamous vulvar carcinoma also utilized different methods of detection, including in-situ, [13][14][15][16][17][18] dot blot, 20,21 and Southern blot 20 hybridization, immunohistochemistry, 15 and PCR-based assays, 2,7,12,18,19,[22][23][24][26][27][28][29][30][31][33][34][35][36] each with different analytic sensitivities. Moreover, the particular HPV genotype(s) targeted in previous work is inconsistent between studies; many early reports documented only HPV16, 18, 33, and/or 6/11, 18,20,21,26,[28][29]…”