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BMC Cancer  2009 

Sensitive HPV detection in oropharyngeal cancers

DOI: 10.1186/1471-2407-9-440

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Abstract:

We compared PGMY09/11, MY09/11 and GP5+/6+ primers sets in PCRs of 34 clinically diagnosed samples of genital warts, cervical brushings (with associated histological diagnosis) and vulval biopsies. All negative samples were subsequently tested using the previously reported PGMY/GP PCR method and amplicons directly sequenced for confirmation and typing. An optimised PCR protocol was then compared to a line blot assay for detection of HPV in 15 oropharyngeal cancer samples.PGMY09/11 primers detected HPV presence in more cervical brushing (100%) and genital wart (92.9%) samples compared to MY09/11 (90% and 64.3%) and GP5+/6+ (80% and 64.3%) primer sets, respectively. From vulval biopsies, HPV detection rates were: MY09/11 (63.6%), GP5+/6+ (54.5%) and PGMY09/11 (54.5%). PGMY/GP nested PCR demonstrated that HPV was present, and direct sequencing confirmed genotypes. This nested PCR protocol showed detection of HPV in 10/15 (66.7%) of oropharyngeal cancer samples.PGMY09/11 primers are the preferred primer set among these three for primary PCR screening with different clinical samples. MY09/11 and GP5+/6+ may be used (particularly for cervical samples) but demonstrate lower detection rates. A nested PCR approach (i.e. a PGMY-GP system) may be required to confirm negativity or to detect low levels of HPV, undetectable using current primary PCR methods, as demonstrated using oropharyngeal cancer samples.Strong epidemiological and molecular evidence has demonstrated human papillomavirus (HPV) to be the aetiological agent of both benign (warts, papillomas) and malignant tumours (subsets of ano-genital and oropharyngeal carcinomas) [1]. It has been estimated that HPV accounts for over 5% of total annual worldwide cancers [2]. The persistence of high-oncogenic risk subtypes has been demonstrated to be a necessary but not sufficient cause of cervical cancer [3]; the principal cancer of women in the developing world and second commonest female cancer worldwide [4,5] (~510,000 case

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