Evidence for a causal role by human papillomaviruses in prostate cancer – a systematic review

Abstract It is hypothesised that high risk for cancer human papillomaviruses (HPVs) have a causal role in prostate cancer. In 26 case control studies, high risk HPVs have been identified in benign and prostate cancers. High risk HPVs were identified in 325 (22.6%) of 1284 prostate cancers and in 113...

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Main Authors: James S. Lawson, Wendy K. Glenn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-07-01
Series:Infectious Agents and Cancer
Subjects:
HPV
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13027-020-00305-8
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spelling doaj-df527c1332ab48a4845519da73063db12020-11-25T03:33:42ZengBMCInfectious Agents and Cancer1750-93782020-07-0115111110.1186/s13027-020-00305-8Evidence for a causal role by human papillomaviruses in prostate cancer – a systematic reviewJames S. Lawson0Wendy K. Glenn1School of Biotechnology and Biomolecular Science, University of New South WalesSchool of Biotechnology and Biomolecular Science, University of New South WalesAbstract It is hypothesised that high risk for cancer human papillomaviruses (HPVs) have a causal role in prostate cancer. In 26 case control studies, high risk HPVs have been identified in benign and prostate cancers. High risk HPVs were identified in 325 (22.6%) of 1284 prostate cancers and in 113 (8.6%) of 1313 normal or benign prostate controls (p = 0.001). High risk HPVs of the same type have been identified in both normal and benign prostate tissues prior to the development of HPV positive prostate cancer. High risk HPVs can be associated with inflammatory prostatitis leading to benign prostate hyperplasia and later prostate cancer. Normal human prostate epithelial cells can be immortalised by experimental exposure to HPVs. HPVs are probably sexually transmitted. The role of HPVs in prostate cancer is complex and differs from HPVs associated cervical cancer. HPV infections may initiate prostate oncogenesis directly and influence oncogenesis indirectly via APOBEC enzymes. HPVs may collaborate with other pathogens in prostate oncogenesis. Although HPVs are only one of many pathogens that have been identified in prostate cancer, they are the only infectious pathogen which can be prevented by vaccination. A causal role for HPVs in prostate cancer is highly likely.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13027-020-00305-8Prostate cancerHuman papillomavirusesHPVTransmissionIdentificationPrevention
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author James S. Lawson
Wendy K. Glenn
spellingShingle James S. Lawson
Wendy K. Glenn
Evidence for a causal role by human papillomaviruses in prostate cancer – a systematic review
Infectious Agents and Cancer
Prostate cancer
Human papillomaviruses
HPV
Transmission
Identification
Prevention
author_facet James S. Lawson
Wendy K. Glenn
author_sort James S. Lawson
title Evidence for a causal role by human papillomaviruses in prostate cancer – a systematic review
title_short Evidence for a causal role by human papillomaviruses in prostate cancer – a systematic review
title_full Evidence for a causal role by human papillomaviruses in prostate cancer – a systematic review
title_fullStr Evidence for a causal role by human papillomaviruses in prostate cancer – a systematic review
title_full_unstemmed Evidence for a causal role by human papillomaviruses in prostate cancer – a systematic review
title_sort evidence for a causal role by human papillomaviruses in prostate cancer – a systematic review
publisher BMC
series Infectious Agents and Cancer
issn 1750-9378
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstract It is hypothesised that high risk for cancer human papillomaviruses (HPVs) have a causal role in prostate cancer. In 26 case control studies, high risk HPVs have been identified in benign and prostate cancers. High risk HPVs were identified in 325 (22.6%) of 1284 prostate cancers and in 113 (8.6%) of 1313 normal or benign prostate controls (p = 0.001). High risk HPVs of the same type have been identified in both normal and benign prostate tissues prior to the development of HPV positive prostate cancer. High risk HPVs can be associated with inflammatory prostatitis leading to benign prostate hyperplasia and later prostate cancer. Normal human prostate epithelial cells can be immortalised by experimental exposure to HPVs. HPVs are probably sexually transmitted. The role of HPVs in prostate cancer is complex and differs from HPVs associated cervical cancer. HPV infections may initiate prostate oncogenesis directly and influence oncogenesis indirectly via APOBEC enzymes. HPVs may collaborate with other pathogens in prostate oncogenesis. Although HPVs are only one of many pathogens that have been identified in prostate cancer, they are the only infectious pathogen which can be prevented by vaccination. A causal role for HPVs in prostate cancer is highly likely.
topic Prostate cancer
Human papillomaviruses
HPV
Transmission
Identification
Prevention
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13027-020-00305-8
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