Biases in human papillomavirus genotype prevalence assessment associated with commonly used consensus primers

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Abstract

Consensus primers targeting human papillomaviruses (HPVs) have biases in sensitivity toward certain HPV types. We applied 3 primer sets (GP5+/6+, MY09/11, PGMY09/11) in parallel on 120 Chinese cervical cancer specimens. GP5+/6+ exhibited a poor sensitivity for HPVS2, for which the prevalence among squamous cell cervical cancer was underestimated from 14.6% to 0%. The fact that HPV52 should rank second in prevalence among squamous cell cervical carcinoma in Hong Kong could be missed if GP5+/6+, a worldwide commonly used primer set, was selected for HPV detection. Biases in HPV type-specific sensitivity may result in misprioritization of vaccine candidates. © 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Chan, P. K. S., Cheung, T. H., Tam, A. O. Y., Lo, K. W. K., Yim, S. F., Yu, M. M. Y., … Ip, M. (2006). Biases in human papillomavirus genotype prevalence assessment associated with commonly used consensus primers. International Journal of Cancer, 118(1), 243–245. https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.21299

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