“…The hypothesis that certain strains of EBV are associated with malignant transformation or with certain tumor types has been an area of active investigation. EBV gene polymorphisms have been demonstrated in a variety of EBV-associated tumors, including endemic Burkitt's lymphoma, Hodgkin's disease, immune deficiency-related lymphomas, gastric carcinoma, and nasopharyngeal carcinoma, as well as in EBV-positive reactive tissues and cultured lymphoblastoid cell lines (Bhatia et al, 1996;Chang et al, 1999;Chen et al, 1998;Fassone et al, 2000;Greiner et al, 2000;Gutierrez et al, 1997;Habeshaw et al, 1999;MacKenzie et al, 1999;Sandvej et al, 2000;Wrightham et al, 1995). Although some earlier studies suggested association of particular EBV strains with certain malignancies (Bhatia et al, 1996;Gutierrez et al, 1997), many subsequent studies have not confirmed this and, instead, have concluded that EBV sequence differences reflect geographic variations rather than any oncogenic potential Chen et al, 1998;Fassone et al, 2000;Habeshaw et al, 1999;MacKenzie et al, 1999;Sandvej et al, 2000).…”