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HPV integration: a precise biomarker for detection of residual/recurrent disease after treatment of CIN2-3.

Authors :
Huang, Fanwei
He, Liang
Li, Wei
Huang, Xiaoyuan
Zhang, Tao
Muaibati, Munawaer
Zhou, Hu
Chen, Shimin
Yang, Wenhui
Yang, Fan
Zhuang, Liang
Hu, Ting
Source :
Infectious Agents & Cancer. 8/8/2024, Vol. 19 Issue 1, p1-9. 9p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background: This study aimed to investigate whether persistent human papillomavirus integration at the same loci (PHISL) before and after treatment can predict recurrent/residual disease in women with CIN2-3. Methods: A total of 151 CIN2-3 women treated with conization between August 2020 and September 2021 were included. To investigate the precision of HPV integration, we further analyzed HPV integration-positive patients. Sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values (PPV and NPV, respectively), and the Youden index for predicting recurrence/residual disease were calculated. Results: Among the 151 enrolled CIN2-3 women, 56 were HPV integration-positive and 95 had HPV integration-negative results. Six (10.7%) experienced recurrence among 56 HPV integration-positive patients, which was more than those in HPV integration-negative patients (one patient, 1.1%). In the 56 HPV integration-positive patients, 12 had positive HPV results after treatment, seven had PHISL, and two had positive cone margin. Among the seven patients who tested with PHISL, six (85.7%) had residual/recurrent disease. PHISL was a prominent predictor of persistent/recurrent disease. The HPV test, the HPV integration test, and PHISL all had a sensitivity of 100% and a NPV of 100% for residual/recurrent disease. PHISL showed better specificity (98.0% vs. 82.0%, p = 0.005) and PPV (85.7% vs. 40.0%, p = 0.001) than the HPV test for predicting recurrence. Conclusions: The HPV-integration-positive CIN2-3 women had much higher relapse rates than HPV-integration-negative CIN2-3 women. The findings indicate that PHISL derived from preoperative and postoperative HPV integration tests may be a precise biomarker for the identification of residual/recurrent CIN 2/3. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17509378
Volume :
19
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Infectious Agents & Cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178913614
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13027-024-00600-8