Abstract

Tenuous evidence has supported the hypothesis that sinonasal inverted papilloma (SNIP) arise from human papillomavirus (HPV) infection. To clarify the role of HPV in SNIP, all known HPV sub-types were evaluated by employing a robust polymerase chain reaction-based method in a wide variety of SNIPs from a single institution. Retrospective surgical specimen tumor sample analysis. HPV positivity among SNIP samples and those with squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) were compared. Immunohistochemistry was used to quantify p16 (over)expression among tumors as a surrogate marker for HPV. HPV was detected in 10/76 (13%) SNIP specimens. Identified HPV subtypes included nononcogenic 6 and 11 (6/76, 8%) and oncogenic 16, 18, 45, 56 (4/76, 5%). There was no HPV positivity among SCC samples. Only 4/10 (40%) HPV + samples had > 75% p16 cell staining. HPV is not supported as an etiological driver of SNIP development or progression to SCC. The p16 biomarker is not a sensitive indicator of HPV positivity in SNIP. NA Laryngoscope, 2443-2447, 2018.

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