Abstract

Human papillomavirus (HPV) are firmly established as the principal causative agent for cervical carcinoma. Current vaccines may provide some protection for women from cervical carcinoma linked to HPV genotype 16 and 18. This may be the best vaccine for Western women, but the geographical variation in HPV distributions may not make it the most appropriate vaccine for China or Asia. This study provided an observational, retrospective, hospital-based cross-sectional study on the distribution of HPV genotypes among 5410 women with invasive cervical cancer (ICC) or cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN). Overall, the positive rates of the four HPV types included in current prophylactic vaccines were counted, the two high-risk types (HPV-16 and -18) covered by current vaccines represented 66.9% of women with squamous cancer, 55.0% with adenocarcinoma, 64.9% with adenosquamous carcinoma and 77.4% of other type ICC, as well as 59.5% of CIN III, 45.0% of CIN II and 38.1% of CIN I cases. As expected, two low-risk types (HPV-6 and -11) included in the quadrivalent vaccine did not show good coverage data. Particularly worth mentioning is the fact that the addition of HPV-52 and -58 to the vaccine cocktail would increase cancer protection in our population, potentially preventing up to beyond 16% of squamous/adenosquamous carcinoma and other type of cervical cancers, and 7.75% of adenocarcinomas. It might also potentially reduce the rate of CIN III by a further 28.6% and CIN II and I by a third. This study established the baseline for surveillance in Zhejiang Province, and provides data for further vaccine designs: a quadrivalent HPV vaccine covering HPV-16/-58/-18/-52, would be more welcome in our region in the forthcoming year compared to the currently available vaccine.

Highlights

  • Invasive cervical cancer (ICC) ranks as the third most common malignancy and the fourth cause of cancer-related death among women worldwide [1,2], with an estimated 528,000 new cases and 266,000 deaths in 2012 [3]

  • Human papillomavirus (HPV) is firmly established as the principal causative agent for cervical carcinoma

  • The 4250 samples of ICC, included squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), ADC, adenosquamous carcinoma (ASC) and other carcinomas, the rate of high-risk human papillomaviruses (hr-HPVs) genotype was higher with SCC than ADC (p < 0.001), but no difference was observed between SCC and ASC (p = 0.08)

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Summary

Introduction

Invasive cervical cancer (ICC) ranks as the third most common malignancy and the fourth cause of cancer-related death among women worldwide [1,2], with an estimated 528,000 new cases and 266,000 deaths in 2012 [3]. Well-organized screening and early therapeutic treatment have dramatically reduced the risk, cervical cancer continues to be a global concern, especially in developing areas, which account for 83% of all cases [4]. Infection plus subsequent events can lead to HPV genome integration and unregulated expression of the pivotal viral oncogenes, E6 and E7. This promotes malignant transformation and immortalization of cervical host-cells [7]

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