Tracking down of laryngo-pharyngeal metastasis.

2010 
BACKGROUND: In Romania, the most optimistic statistics give a 5 years survival rate in approximately 33% of laryngo-pharyngeal cancer patients. Considering that a cell carrying the viral DNA is originating from primary tumor, we have tested whether HPV DNA could be detected in the blood cell of patients with laryngeal cancer as a marker of disease progression and metastases. METHODS: The study was performed on 85 patients (59 +/- 8.7 age) with laryngo-pharyngeal cancer. HPV DNA was detected in tumor using nested PCR with consensus primers, and also in local lymph nodes and/or blood cells from patients HPV positive in primary tumor. RESULTS: HPV DNA was detected in 75.29% of analyzed tumours, and all HPV16 positive samples were confirmed by mRNA E6 expression. 56.3% of patients presented HPV DNA in peripheral circulation as confirmed by PCR with E6 HPV16 specific primers followed by Southern Blot. CONCLUSION: Our results sustain that the detection of HPV DNA in blood is a "surrogate marker" of metastasis when extension of metastasis cannot be estimated, this observation is very important for management of cancer patients with laryngopharyngeal localization.
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