Searching beyond the usual papillomavirus suspects in squamous carcinomas of the vulva, penis and head and neck
Marta F\'elez-S\'anchez, Marleny Vergara, Silvia de Sanjos\'e, Xavier, Castellsagu\'e, Laia Alemany, Ignacio Bravo (MIVEGEC)

TL;DR
This study reanalyzed HPV-negative cancer samples from vulva, penis, and head and neck to identify other papillomaviruses, revealing limited presence of cutaneous HPVs and emphasizing the sensitivity of the detection method.
Contribution
It demonstrates the low prevalence of non-typical HPVs in these cancers and assesses the sensitivity of broad-spectrum PCR methods in detecting HPV DNA.
Findings
Only 2.1% false negatives with SPF10/DEIA
Cutaneous HPVs are rarely found in these cancers
Their role in malignancy remains uncertain
Abstract
Human Papillomaviruses (HPVs) are involved in the etiology of anogenital and head and neck cancers. The HPV DNA prevalence greatly differs by anatomical site. Indeed, the high rates of viral DNA prevalence in anal and cer-vical carcinomas contrast with the lower fraction of cancer cases attributable to HPVs in other anatomical sites, chiefly the vulva, the penis and head and neck. Here we analyzed 2635 Formalin Fixed Paraffin Embedded surgical samples that had previously tested negative for the presence of HPVs DNA using the SPF10/DEIA procedure, in order to identify the presence of other PVs not explicitly targeted by standard molecular epidemiologic approaches. All samples were reanalyzed using five broad-PV PCR primer sets (CP1/2, FAP6064/FAP64, SKF/SKR, MY9/MY11, MFI/MFII) targeting the main PV main clades. In head and neck carcinoma samples (n = 1141), we recovered DNA from two…
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