“…Further, several critically important molecular pathways, including TP53, RB1, NOTCH, WNT, NF-κB, and PIK3CA/AKT/MTOR that control the cell cycle, cell death, cell proliferation, and DNA synthesis are hijacked in HPV-positive OPSCC compared to HPV-negative tumors, resulting in a unique molecular phenotype in these tumors that might be druggable in a personalized genomic medicine approach (reviewed by Rampias et al 2014). Multiple recent articles discuss molecular genetic differences between HPV-positive and negative OPSCC/HNSCC, which is beyond the scope of this chapter (Sepiashvili et al 2015;The Cancer Genome Atlas 2015). Probably as a result of less chromosomal instability and fewer mutations in their tumors, patients with HPV-positive OPSCC have better disease-free and overall survival than those with HPV-negative tumors (Pytynia et al 2014).…”