Abstract
Objective
A synergistic effect between smoking and alcohol intake is the major cause of premalignant and malignant lesions of the larynx, but the risk factors and pathogenesis of the neoplastic transformation in nonsmokers remain poorly defined. The aim of this retrospective study is to establish the relationship between smoking habits and human papillomavirus (HPV) infection in laryngeal dysplasia.
Study Design
Cross-sectional study.
Setting
Academic university hospital.
Subjects and Methods
HPV DNA was amplified from 30 paraffin-embedded laryngeal dysplasia tissue specimens by the polymerase chain reaction using 2 groups of different consensus primers (MYO9/MY11 and LCRF1-4, E7R1-4). Fifteen samples were taken from smokers and 15 from nonsmokers.
Results
The present investigation failed to demonstrate the HPV genome in all samples of laryngeal precancerous lesions, whereas HPV was detected in 4 laryngeal papilloma samples used as control to confirm the reliability of our method on paraffin-embedded samples.
Conclusions
Although the small number of cases in our series limits the power of our statistical analysis, the absence of viral genomes in the specimens analyzed in this study suggests the lack of a relationship between HPV infection and laryngeal dysplasia in smokers as well as in nonsmokers.
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