British Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery
Volume 49, Issue 6 , Pages 423-429, September 2011

The increasing clinical relevance of human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV-16) infection in oropharyngeal cancer

  • Richard Shaw

      Affiliations

    • School of Cancer Studies, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK
    • University Hospital Aintree, Liverpool, UK
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author at: Department of Surgery & Oncology, School of Cancer Studies, University of Liverpool, 5th Floor UCD, Duncan Building, Daulby Street, Liverpool, L69 3GA, UK. Tel.: +44 0151 529 5290.
  • ,
  • Max Robinson

      Affiliations

    • School of Dental Sciences, Newcastle University, UK

Accepted 24 June 2010. published online 23 August 2010.

Abstract 

Human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV-16) has been established beyond doubt as a causative agent in oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). The incidence of oropharyngeal cancer has risen in recent decades, as has the proportion of patients who have a biologically relevant HPV-16 infection. Combined data from 14 recently published studies (2006–2010) show that 57% of 1316 reported cases of oropharyngeal SCC were HPV-16 positive. They had significantly better prognosis (hazard ratio (HR) for 5-year overall survival range 0.05–0.64), although smoking and higher T stage often appear as confounding factors to this favourable prognostic benefit. HPV-16 therefore has increasing importance as a clinically useful prognostic biomarker, but a benefit in survival has been seen in the use of surgery, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy, so specific changes in the preferred methods of treatment are hard to justify. Future trials that include oropharyngeal SCC will consider HPV-16 routinely as a stratification factor, and its use as a predictive biomarker awaits the development of effective targeted treatments. The undeniable and impressive prognostic significance of HPV-16 should hasten its addition to standard pathological reporting of oropharyngeal SCC, and ultimately to its inclusion in TNM staging systems of the American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) and the International Union against Cancer (UICC).

Keywords: Oropharyngeal cancer, HPV, Prognostic biomarker, Clinical trials

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PII: S0266-4356(10)00221-4

doi:10.1016/j.bjoms.2010.06.023

British Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery
Volume 49, Issue 6 , Pages 423-429, September 2011