학술논문

Risk factors for human papillomavirus‐positive nonoropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma
Document Type
article
Source
Head & Neck. 42(8)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Digestive Diseases
Infectious Diseases
Cancer
Clinical Research
HIV/AIDS
Cervical Cancer
Prevention
Sexually Transmitted Infections
Dental/Oral and Craniofacial Disease
Alphapapillomavirus
Carcinoma
Squamous Cell
Head and Neck Neoplasms
Humans
Oropharyngeal Neoplasms
Papillomavirus Infections
Prospective Studies
Risk Factors
biomarkers
head and neck cancer
HPV
oropharyngeal cancer
survival
Clinical Sciences
Dentistry
Otorhinolaryngology
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundHuman papillomavirus (HPV)-positive oropharyngeal cancer (HPV-OPC) is distinct from HPV-unassociated head and neck cancer. However, whether risk factors for HPV-positive oropharyngeal and nonoropharyngeal squamous cell cancer are the same is unclear.MethodsIncident cases of HPV-positive head and neck cell cancer and matched non-cancer controls were enrolled in a multi-institutional, prospective study examining risk factors, biomarkers, and survival.ResultsHPV-nonOPC (n = 20) were more likely to be ever smokers than controls (n = 80, OR 3.49, 95%CI 1.11-10.9) and HPV-OPC (n = 185, OR 3.28, 95%CI 1.10-10.2). Compared with HPV-OPC, HPV-nonOPC were less likely to have had over 3 oral sexual partners (OR 0.29, 95%CI 0.06-0.9), more likely to have multimorbidity (OR 3.30, 95%CI 1.04-10.5), and less likely to have antibodies to HPV16 E6 (90% vs 28%, OR 0.05, 95%CI 0.02-0.2). HPV-nonOPC had worse 4-year OS (77% vs 96%, P = .001) and RFS (69% vs 94%, P