How Does Smoking Change the Clinicopathological Characteristics of Human Papillomavirus-Positive Oropharyngeal Squamous Cell Carcinoma? One Medical Center Experience.
Changxing LiuGuy TalmorGarren Mi LowTiffany V WangDaljit S MannUttam K SinhaNiels C KokotPublished in: Clinical medicine insights. Ear, nose and throat (2018)
Our data confirmed that HPV+ OPSCC normally presents with more advanced stage, however, it has better prognosis. In comparison, HPV- OPSCC presents at an earlier stage, but the prognosis is worse. Based on their clinical profiles, we noted that HPV-positive OPSCC cells are more "mobile"; they metastasize sooner and further. However, HPV-negative OPSCC cells are more locally infiltrative, leading to more locoregional recurrence. The HPV-positive patients usually are younger and healthier at diagnosis. Although HPV-positive OPSCC tend to be histologically higher grades, there was no statistical difference noticed. Metastatic and recurrent patterns are very different between HPV-positive and HPV-negative patients, but the death rate of HPV-negative patients is way higher, and it is mainly due to locoregional recurrences, which is the major recurrence type for HPV-negative patients. Of our note, smoking is a complicating factor for HPV-positive OPSCC, and it makes the death rate, recurrence rate, histology grade, and TNM staging shift toward HPV-negative OPSCC. How smoking makes HPV-positive OPSCC behave more like OPSCC-negative OPSCC deserves more translational research for further elucidation.
Keyphrases
- high grade
- end stage renal disease
- squamous cell carcinoma
- chronic kidney disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- cervical cancer screening
- peritoneal dialysis
- prognostic factors
- induced apoptosis
- small cell lung cancer
- oxidative stress
- lymph node
- cell proliferation
- smoking cessation
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- electronic health record
- patient reported