This retrospective study investigated the presence of human papillomavirus (HPV) in Chinese women with breast cancer, and the correlation between HPV infection and carcinogenesis. Tumour and noncancerous breast tissue samples were obtained from 62 female patients with breast cancer; normal breast tissue samples were obtained from 46 women without breast cancer. HPV DNA was detected by nested polymerase chain reaction using consensus primers; HPV subtypes were determined by reverse dot blot and pyrosequencing analyses. HPV was found in tumour tissue samples from four of the 62 patients (6.5%), while no HPV DNA was detected in either the noncancerous samples from patients with breast cancer or from the normal breast tissue controls. Of the four HPV-positive cases, three were HPV 16 positive (75%) and one was HPV 18 positive (25%). The low frequency of HPV detected in this study suggests that this infection is not a major risk factor in breast cancer development. © 2011 Field House Publishing LLP.
CITATION STYLE
Mou, X., Chen, L., Liu, F., Shen, Y., Wang, H., Li, Y., … Xiang, C. (2011). Low prevalence of human papillomavirus (HPV) in Chinese patients with breast cancer. Journal of International Medical Research, 39(5), 1636–1644. https://doi.org/10.1177/147323001103900506
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