Abstract

Human papillomavirus (HPV) is the most identifiable cause of head and neck squamous cell cancer (HNSCC). Compared with HPV-negative HNSCC, HPV-positive HNSCC presents at an advanced stage but with significantly better survival. We created a syngeneic mouse model of HPV-positive and HPV-negative HNSCC by transforming mouse primary tonsil epithelial cells with either HPV oncogenes or a nonantigenic RNA interference strategy that affects similar oncogenic pathways. To examine the effect of radiation therapy on HPV-positive and HPV-negative tumors in immune-competent and immune-incompetent mice and to examine responses in human cancer cell lines. Prospective in vivo murine model. Survival and tumor growth. For human and murine transformed cell lines, HPV-positive cells were more resistant to radiation and cisplatin therapy compared with HPV-negative cells. In vivo, HPV-positive tumors were more sensitive to radiation, with complete clearance at 20 Gy, compared with their HPV-negative counterparts, which showed persistent growth. Cisplatin in vivo cleared HPV-positive tumors but not HPV-negative tumors. However, neither radiation or cisplatin therapy cured immune-incompetent mice. Adoptive transfer of wild-type immune cells into immune-incompetent mice restored HPV-positive tumor clearance with cisplatin therapy. The HPV-positive tumors are not more curable based on increased epithelial sensitivity to cisplatin or radiation therapy. Instead, radiation and cisplatin induce an immune response to this antigenic cancer. The implications of these results may lead to novel therapies that enhance tumor eradication for HPV-positive cancers.

Highlights

  • Human papillomavirus (HPV) is the most identifiable cause of head and neck squamous cell cancer (HNSCC)

  • The HPV-positive tumors are not more curable based on increased epithelial sensitivity to cisplatin or radiation therapy

  • It is possible that the survival advantage of patients with HPV-positive HNSCC treated with chemoradiotherapy is due to an inherent radiosensitivity of HPV-positive tumor cells compared with HPV-negative tumor cells

Read more

Summary

Objectives

To examine the effect of radiation therapy on HPV-positive and HPV-negative tumors in immunecompetent and immune-incompetent mice and to examine responses in human cancer cell lines

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call