Nasopharyngeal brush biopsies and detection of nasopharyngeal cancer in a high-risk population

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Abstract

Background: Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) is an important tumor in many countries. Ethnic and regional factors strongly influence disease risk. NPC is usually diagnosed late in disease development, and 10-year survival rates are as low as 10%. Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), a possibly causative agent, is present in all cells of essentially all undifferentiated NPCs. We wished to determine the following: 1) whether an ambulatory nasopharyngeal brush biopsy could provide sufficient tumor cell DNA for the detection of EBV and 2) whether the detection of EBV in this locale reflects the presence of tumor cell,; or simply EBV carrier status. Methods: We collected nasopharyngeal tissue via ambulatory brush biopsies from 21 patients with newly diagnosed NPC and from 157 subjects with other otolaryngologic complaints. The majority of study subjects were from high-risk populations. Sample DNA was analyzed for the presence of EBV genomic sequences by use of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Results: Ninety-six percent of samples yielded sufficient DNA for PCR amplification. Nineteen of 21 patients with NPC brushed positive for EBV DNA, while all but two (1.3%) of 149 informative control subjects were negative for EBV (two-sided P

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Tune, C. E., Liavaag, P. G., Freeman, J. L., Van Den Brekel, M. W. M., Shpitzer, T., Kerrebijn, J. D. F., … Dosch, H. M. (1999). Nasopharyngeal brush biopsies and detection of nasopharyngeal cancer in a high-risk population. Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 91(9), 796–800. https://doi.org/10.1093/jnci/91.9.796

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