Abstract

Infection with human papillomavirus (HPV) could be a suspected or potential modifiable risk factor in esophageal carcinoma (EC) but findings have not been consistent. We therefore investigated the epidemiology of HPV infection and integration in the pathogenesis of esophageal carcinoma (EC) in the Shantou region, China. This was a retrospective study involving nested PCR to evaluate HPV presence, HPV genotyping, and analyzing HPV-16 integration status in esophageal tumor tissues (n=106) and paired tumor-adjacent normal tissues, as well as normal esophagus tissue from control subjects (n=100). The detection rates of HPV DNA in EC and tumor-adjacent tissue were significantly higher than that in normal controls (77.4% and 80.2% vs. 33.0%). HPV infection was mainly found in adults, ages 35-47 years old, and the infection rate was negatively associated with the age of EC patients (P-trend<0.05). In addition, the HPV infection rates in patients who smoked was 3.27 times higher than in non-smoking patients (84.9% vs. 67.4%, P<0.05) but was not associated with gender, alcohol consumption, tumor grade or lymph-node metastasis of EC patients. The distribution of HPV genotypes in patients from high to low proportion was HPV-16, -58, -18, -33, -31 and -11. Infection with multiple HPV genotypes mainly included HPV-16/-18 and HPV-16/-33. The integration rate of HPV-16 in EC tissue was higher than that in tumor-adjacent and control tissues (93.4% vs. 50.9% and 45.5%). Our findings indicate that infection with HPV, especially the high-risk HPV, and their integration suggest an association in malignant transformation of EC in the high-incidence EC region in Shantou, China.

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