Human papillomavirus infection in head and neck cancer: the role of the secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor.

Standard

Human papillomavirus infection in head and neck cancer: the role of the secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor. / Hoffmann, Markus; Quabius, Elgar S; Tribius, Silke; Hebebrand, Lena; Görögh, Tibor; Halec, Gordana; Kahn, Tomas; Hedderich, Jürgen; Röcken, Christoph; Haag, Jochen; Waterboer, Tim; Schmitt, Markus; Giuliano, Anna R; Kast, W Martin.

In: ONCOL REP, Vol. 29, No. 5, 5, 2013, p. 1962-1968.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hoffmann, M, Quabius, ES, Tribius, S, Hebebrand, L, Görögh, T, Halec, G, Kahn, T, Hedderich, J, Röcken, C, Haag, J, Waterboer, T, Schmitt, M, Giuliano, AR & Kast, WM 2013, 'Human papillomavirus infection in head and neck cancer: the role of the secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor.', ONCOL REP, vol. 29, no. 5, 5, pp. 1962-1968. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23467841?dopt=Citation>

APA

Hoffmann, M., Quabius, E. S., Tribius, S., Hebebrand, L., Görögh, T., Halec, G., Kahn, T., Hedderich, J., Röcken, C., Haag, J., Waterboer, T., Schmitt, M., Giuliano, A. R., & Kast, W. M. (2013). Human papillomavirus infection in head and neck cancer: the role of the secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor. ONCOL REP, 29(5), 1962-1968. [5]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23467841?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Hoffmann M, Quabius ES, Tribius S, Hebebrand L, Görögh T, Halec G et al. Human papillomavirus infection in head and neck cancer: the role of the secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor. ONCOL REP. 2013;29(5):1962-1968. 5.

Bibtex

@article{0bac5a2b9ab740379da84f4c620d30ef,
title = "Human papillomavirus infection in head and neck cancer: the role of the secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor.",
abstract = "We previously showed that secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor (SLPI) gene and protein expression is significantly lower in metastatic versus non-metastatic head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). However, we did not assess the human papillomavirus (HPV) status of these cases. Since SLPI plays a role in HIV and herpes simplex virus (HSV) infections, we hypothesized that SLPI may be involved in HPV-infected HNSCC. In HNSCC tissue (n=54), HPV DNA was determined and correlated with SLPI expression. Additionally, to investigate a possible role of smoking on SLPI expression in clinically normal mucosa, 19 patients treated for non?malignant diseases (non-HNSCC) were analyzed for SLPI expression and correlated with smoking habits. In HNSCC patients, SLPI expression showed a significant inverse correlation with HPV status. In patients with moderate/strong SLPI expression (n=19), 10.5% were HPV-positive. By contrast, patients with absent/weak SLPI expression (n=35), 45.7% were HPV-positive. Low SLPI expression was correlated with metastasis (P=0.003) independent of HPV status. HPV-positivity was clearly associated with lymph node status (81.3% N1-3 cases). In smoking non-HNSCC patients (n=7), 42.9% showed absent/weak and 57.1% moderate/strong SLPI staining. In non-smoking non-HNSCC patients (n=10) 83.3% showed absent/weak and 16.7% moderate/strong SLPI expression. For the first time, a correlation between SLPI downregulation and HPV infection was demonstrated, suggesting that high levels of SLPI, possibly induced by environmental factors such as tobacco smoking, correlate with protective effects against HPV infection. SLPI may be a potential biomarker identifying head and neck cancer patients not at risk of developing metastases (SLPI-positive), and those at risk to be infected by HPV (SLPI-negative) and likely to develop metastases.",
author = "Markus Hoffmann and Quabius, {Elgar S} and Silke Tribius and Lena Hebebrand and Tibor G{\"o}r{\"o}gh and Gordana Halec and Tomas Kahn and J{\"u}rgen Hedderich and Christoph R{\"o}cken and Jochen Haag and Tim Waterboer and Markus Schmitt and Giuliano, {Anna R} and Kast, {W Martin}",
year = "2013",
language = "English",
volume = "29",
pages = "1962--1968",
journal = "ONCOL REP",
issn = "1021-335X",
publisher = "Spandidos Publications",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Human papillomavirus infection in head and neck cancer: the role of the secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor.

AU - Hoffmann, Markus

AU - Quabius, Elgar S

AU - Tribius, Silke

AU - Hebebrand, Lena

AU - Görögh, Tibor

AU - Halec, Gordana

AU - Kahn, Tomas

AU - Hedderich, Jürgen

AU - Röcken, Christoph

AU - Haag, Jochen

AU - Waterboer, Tim

AU - Schmitt, Markus

AU - Giuliano, Anna R

AU - Kast, W Martin

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - We previously showed that secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor (SLPI) gene and protein expression is significantly lower in metastatic versus non-metastatic head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). However, we did not assess the human papillomavirus (HPV) status of these cases. Since SLPI plays a role in HIV and herpes simplex virus (HSV) infections, we hypothesized that SLPI may be involved in HPV-infected HNSCC. In HNSCC tissue (n=54), HPV DNA was determined and correlated with SLPI expression. Additionally, to investigate a possible role of smoking on SLPI expression in clinically normal mucosa, 19 patients treated for non?malignant diseases (non-HNSCC) were analyzed for SLPI expression and correlated with smoking habits. In HNSCC patients, SLPI expression showed a significant inverse correlation with HPV status. In patients with moderate/strong SLPI expression (n=19), 10.5% were HPV-positive. By contrast, patients with absent/weak SLPI expression (n=35), 45.7% were HPV-positive. Low SLPI expression was correlated with metastasis (P=0.003) independent of HPV status. HPV-positivity was clearly associated with lymph node status (81.3% N1-3 cases). In smoking non-HNSCC patients (n=7), 42.9% showed absent/weak and 57.1% moderate/strong SLPI staining. In non-smoking non-HNSCC patients (n=10) 83.3% showed absent/weak and 16.7% moderate/strong SLPI expression. For the first time, a correlation between SLPI downregulation and HPV infection was demonstrated, suggesting that high levels of SLPI, possibly induced by environmental factors such as tobacco smoking, correlate with protective effects against HPV infection. SLPI may be a potential biomarker identifying head and neck cancer patients not at risk of developing metastases (SLPI-positive), and those at risk to be infected by HPV (SLPI-negative) and likely to develop metastases.

AB - We previously showed that secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor (SLPI) gene and protein expression is significantly lower in metastatic versus non-metastatic head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). However, we did not assess the human papillomavirus (HPV) status of these cases. Since SLPI plays a role in HIV and herpes simplex virus (HSV) infections, we hypothesized that SLPI may be involved in HPV-infected HNSCC. In HNSCC tissue (n=54), HPV DNA was determined and correlated with SLPI expression. Additionally, to investigate a possible role of smoking on SLPI expression in clinically normal mucosa, 19 patients treated for non?malignant diseases (non-HNSCC) were analyzed for SLPI expression and correlated with smoking habits. In HNSCC patients, SLPI expression showed a significant inverse correlation with HPV status. In patients with moderate/strong SLPI expression (n=19), 10.5% were HPV-positive. By contrast, patients with absent/weak SLPI expression (n=35), 45.7% were HPV-positive. Low SLPI expression was correlated with metastasis (P=0.003) independent of HPV status. HPV-positivity was clearly associated with lymph node status (81.3% N1-3 cases). In smoking non-HNSCC patients (n=7), 42.9% showed absent/weak and 57.1% moderate/strong SLPI staining. In non-smoking non-HNSCC patients (n=10) 83.3% showed absent/weak and 16.7% moderate/strong SLPI expression. For the first time, a correlation between SLPI downregulation and HPV infection was demonstrated, suggesting that high levels of SLPI, possibly induced by environmental factors such as tobacco smoking, correlate with protective effects against HPV infection. SLPI may be a potential biomarker identifying head and neck cancer patients not at risk of developing metastases (SLPI-positive), and those at risk to be infected by HPV (SLPI-negative) and likely to develop metastases.

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

VL - 29

SP - 1962

EP - 1968

JO - ONCOL REP

JF - ONCOL REP

SN - 1021-335X

IS - 5

M1 - 5

ER -