HPV-mediated cervical carcinogenesis: concepts and clinical implications

被引:330
作者
Snijders, PJF [1 ]
Steenbergen, RDM [1 ]
Heideman, DAM [1 ]
Meijer, CJLM [1 ]
机构
[1] Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Dept Pathol, Med Ctr, NL-1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands
关键词
cervix; neoplasia; human papillomavirus; carcinogenesis; model; CIN;
D O I
10.1002/path.1866
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Persistent infection with a high-risk human papillomavirus (hrHPV) is generally accepted as a necessary cause of cervical cancer. However, cervical cancer is a rare complication of an hrHPV infection since most such infections are transient, not even giving rise to cervical lesions. On average, it takes 12-15 years before a persistent hrHPV infection may ultimately, via consecutive premalignant stages (ie CIN lesions), lead to an overt cervical carcinoma. This argues that HPV-induced cervical carcinogenesis is multi-step in nature. In this review, the data from hrHPV-mediated in vitro transformation studies and those obtained from analysis of clinical specimens have been merged into a cervical cancer progression model. According to this model, a crucial decision maker in the early stages following infection involves individual susceptibility for certain HPV types depending on the genetic make-up of immune surveillance determinants. Once a CIN lesion has developed, altered transcriptional regulation of the viral E6/E7 oncogenes, resulting in genomic instability and distinguishing the process of cell transformation from a productive viral infection, probably provides the subsequent important step towards malignancy. The additional (epi)genetic alterations that subsequently accumulate in high-grade CIN lesions may result in overt malignancy via immortality and growth conditions that gradually become less sensitive to growth-modulating influences mediated by cytokines and cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesions. The potential implications of hrHPV testing and some other biomarkers deduced from this model for cervical screening and the clinical management of CIN disease are also discussed. Copyright (c) 2006 Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
引用
收藏
页码:152 / 164
页数:13
相关论文
共 127 条
[1]   Loss of heterozygosity on chromosome 6 in HPV-16 positive cervical carcinomas carrying the DRBI*1501-DQB1*0602 haplotype [J].
Arias-Pulido, H ;
Joste, N ;
Wheeler, CM .
GENES CHROMOSOMES & CANCER, 2004, 40 (04) :277-284
[2]   A region on human chromosome 4 (q35.1→qter) induces senescence in cell hybrids and is involved in cervical carcinogenesis [J].
Backsch, C ;
Rudolph, B ;
Kühne-Heid, R ;
Kalscheuer, V ;
Bartsch, O ;
Jansen, L ;
Beer, K ;
Meyer, B ;
Schneider, A ;
Dürst, M .
GENES CHROMOSOMES & CANCER, 2005, 43 (03) :260-272
[3]   Microcell-mediated transfer of chromosome 4 into HeLa cells suppresses telomerase activity [J].
Backsch, C ;
Wagenbach, N ;
Nonn, M ;
Leistritz, S ;
Stanbridge, E ;
Schneider, A ;
Dürst, M .
GENES CHROMOSOMES & CANCER, 2001, 31 (02) :196-198
[4]   Triage using HPV-testing in persistent borderline and mildly dyskaryotic smears: Proposal for new guidelines [J].
Bais, AG ;
Rebolj, M ;
Snijders, JF ;
de Schipper, FA ;
van der Meulen, DAJ ;
Verheijen, RHM ;
Voorhorst, F ;
van Ballegooijen, M ;
Meijer, CJLM ;
Helmerhorst, TJM .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER, 2005, 116 (01) :122-129
[5]   The epidemiology of human papillomavirus infections [J].
Baseman, JG ;
Koutsky, LA .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL VIROLOGY, 2005, 32 :S16-S24
[6]  
BERKHOF J, IN PRESS INT J CANC
[7]   HLA class II allele control of HPV load in carcinoma in situ of the cervix uteri [J].
Beskow, AH ;
Moberg, M ;
Gyllensten, UB .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER, 2005, 117 (03) :510-514
[8]   Host genetic control of HPV 16 titer in carcinoma in situ of the cervix uteri [J].
Beskow, AH ;
Gyllensten, UB .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER, 2002, 101 (06) :526-531
[9]   The tumor suppressor TSLC1/NECL-2 triggers NK-cell and CD8+ T-cell responses through the ceff-surface receptor CRTAM [J].
Boles, KS ;
Barchet, W ;
Diacovo, T ;
Cella, M ;
Colonna, M .
BLOOD, 2005, 106 (03) :779-786
[10]  
Bosch F Xavier, 2003, J Natl Cancer Inst Monogr, P3