946 resultados para Human papillomavirus type 6
Resumo:
O Papilomavirus humano infecta as células basais do epitélio estratificado, induzindo a lesões proliferativas benignas na pele ou mucosas. As infecções apresentam distribuição universal, no entanto muitos estudos têm demonstrado a forte associação da infecção por espécies de alto risco com casos de câncer cervical. No Brasil, esse tipo de câncer é o segundo tipo mais comum entre as mulheres, sendo que as regiões norte e nordeste do país apresentam a maior incidência. O presente estudo visou determinar a prevalência da infecção em um grupo de mulheres rastreadas para o câncer cervical. No período de julho de 2008 a março de 2009 foram coletadas amostras cervicais de 144 mulheres atendidas no Laboratório de Citopatologia do Hospital Amazônia de Quatro Bocas, Tomé – Açu, estado do Pará. Os dados obtidos foram correlacionados com a infecção através do teste do qui-quadrado. A Prevalência do HPV foi de 6,94%, a idade variou em 18 -28 anos, 76 pacientes apresentaram quadro inflamatório, ou seja, 52,05%, enquanto que 60 pacientes não apresentaram alteração, com 41,09% do total. Dentre os esfregaços com alterações citológicas, ASC-US foi encontrado na maioria dos casos, (6/10), seguido de LSIL (2/10), e ASC-H (1/10), e HSIL (1/10). A infecção pelo HPV mostrou associação estatisticamente significativa com a PCR, faixa etária e citomorfologia. A prevalência encontrada no estudo corrobora com outros achados descritos na literatura. A predominância da infecção em mulheres com citologia anormal reforça a ideia de que a infecção é, em sua maioria, assintomática e que o método de Papanicolau é menos eficiente na detecção da infecção em relação às técnicas de biologia molecular.
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O câncer bucal e de laringe representam um problema crescente de saúde pública no Brasil. O tabagismo e o álcool são considerados os principais causadores do câncer bucal e de laringe, porém uma parte da população desenvolve a doença sem estar exposta a estes fatores de risco, sugerindo a existência de outras causas como: predisposição genética, alteração de genes supressores tumorais, dieta e agentes virais, em particular o Papilomavírus humano (HPV) e o vírus Epstein-Barr (EBV). Este estudo teve como proposição verificar a prevalência do HPV e do EBV na mucosa oral normal e no câncer bucal e de laringe, e quais os tipos mais prevalentes nestas duas situações. Para este estudo foram estabelecidos dois grupos: um composto por 70 espécimes emblocados em parafina, com diagnóstico confirmado de câncer bucal e laringe e outro com 166 indivíduos sem presença de lesões na cavidade bucal. A análise laboratorial para detecção viral do HPV e a detecção e tipagem do EBV (EBV 1 ou tipo 2) foram realizadas através da técnica de PCR (Reação em Cadeia de Polimerase) convencional. Já as tipagens das amostras positivas para o HPV (tipos 6, 11, 16, 18, 33, 35, 38, 52 e 58) foram realizadas por PCR em tempo real, utilizando sondas específicas para cada tipo. A prevalência do HPV e EBV encontrada nas neoplasias orais e de laringe foi de 78,6% para HPV e de 84,3% para EBV e de 24,1% e 45,8% para HPV e EBV, respectivamente, em indivíduos sem lesões orais. Os tipos mais prevalentes de HPV foram HPV 58 (50,9%), HPV 6 (9,1%) e HPV 16 (9,1%) nas neoplasias e HPV 18 (12,5%), HPV 6 (7,5%) e HPV 58 (2,5%) no grupo com ausência de lesões. O EBV 2 foi mais prevalente tanto nas lesões neoplásicas quanto nos indivíduos sem lesões, com frequência de 94,9% e 82,9%, respectivamente. Não houve associação da infecção por HPV e EBV com o sexo, sendo a prevalência semelhante para homens e mulheres. Foi observada associação entre as prevalências de HPV e EBV e suas co-infecções com o grupo que desenvolveu câncer. A prevalência de infecção por HPV e EBV e a razão de chances na ocorrência do câncer foi de 8,86 (p<0,0001) nos indivíduos infectados pelo HPV e de 4,08 (p=0,0004) nos infectados pelo EBV. O valor probabilístico estimado para prevalência de HPV e EBV e co-infecção e a ocorrência de câncer, demonstrou que o indivíduo infectado pelos dois vírus tem 65,72% de probabilidade de desenvolver câncer, enquanto o infectado pelo HPV tem 31,94% e o infectado pelo EBV 17,79%. Os resultados encontrados neste estudo permitem sugerir que os agentes virais (HPV e EBV) são fatores de risco importantes para o desenvolvimento da carcinogênese, sendo o HPV mais efetivo que o EBV no desencadeamento da doença.
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Human leukocyte antigen-G (HLA-G) is a non-classical major histocompatibility complex class Ib molecule that acts as a specific immunosuppressor. Some studies have demonstrated that human papillomavirus (HPV) seems to be involved in lower or absent HLA-G expression, particularly in cervical cancer. In this study, we performed a cross-sectional study, systematically comparing the qualitative expression of the HLA-G5 isoform in invasive cervical carcinoma (ICC), stratifying patients according to the presence [ICC with metastasis (ICCW)] and absence [ICC without metastasis (ICCWT)] of metastasis, correlating these findings with interference of HPV and demographic and clinical variables. Seventy-nine patients with a diagnosis of ICC were stratified into two groups: ICCWT (n=52 patients) and ICCW (n=27). Two biopsies were collected from each patient (one from the tumor lesion and one from a lymph node). Immunohistochemistry analyses were performed for the HLA-G5 isoform, for HPV detection, and virus typing. HLA-G5 isoform molecules were detected in 25 cases (31.6%), 17 (32.7%) without metastasis and 8 (29.6%) with metastasis. HPV was detected in the cervical lesions of 74 patients (93.7%), but low expression of the HLA-G5 isoform was observed in all HPV-related cases. These findings are important; however, additional studies are necessary to identify the influence of HPV with HLA-G5 isoform expression on invasive cervical malignancies.
Resumo:
Abstract Objectives To evaluate the prevalence of human papillomavirus (HPV) types, and risk factors for HPV positivity across cervix, vagina and anus, we conducted a study among 138 women with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Goal Compare the prevalence of different HPV types and the risk factors for HPV positivity in three sites. Results The most frequently detected HPV types in all sites were, in decreasing order, HPV16, 53, 18, 61 and 81. Agreement between the cervix and vagina was good (kappa 0.60 – 0.80) for HPV16 and 53 and excellent (Kappa > 0.80) for HPV18 and 61. HPV positivity was inversely associated with age for all combinations including the anal site. Conclusion In HIV positive women, HPV18 is the most spread HPV type found in combinations of anal and genital sites. The relationship of anal to genital infection has implications for the development of anal malignancies. Thus, the efficacy of the current HPV vaccine may be considered not only for the cervix, but also for prevention of HPV18 anal infection among immunossuppressed individuals.
Resumo:
Multiple mammary epithelial cell (MEC) types are observed both in mammary ducts in vivo and in primary cultures in vitro; however, the oncogenic potential of different cell types remains unknown. Here, we used human papilloma virus 16 E6 and E7 oncogenes, which target p53 and Rb tumor suppressor proteins, respectively, to immortalize MECs present in early or late passages of human mammary tissue-derived cultures or in milk. One MEC subtype was exclusively immortalized by E6; such cells predominated in late-passage cultures but were rare at early passages and apparently absent in milk. Surprisingly, a second cell type, present only in early-passage tissue-derived cultures, was fully immortalized by E7 alone. A third cell type, observed in tissue-derived cultures and in milk, showed a substantial extension of life span with E7 but eventually senesced. Finally, both E6 and E7 were required to fully immortalize milk-derived MECs and a large proportion of MECs in early-passage tissue-derived cultures, suggesting the presence of another discrete subpopulation. Identification of MECs with distinct susceptibilities to p53- and Rb-targeting human papillomavirus oncogenes raises the possibility that these cells may serve as precursors for different forms of breast cancer.
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O câncer do colo do útero constitui a terceira neoplasia maligna mais comum na população feminina, com aproximadamente 520 mil novos casos e 260 mil óbitos por ano e origina-se a partir da infecção genital persistente pelo Papiloma Vírus Humano (HPV) oncogênico. Os principais HPVs considerados de alto risco oncogênico são os tipos HPV-16 e 18, responsáveis por cerca de 70% de todos os casos de cânceres cervicais (CC) no mundo. Pacientes com CC apresentam taxa de recidiva variando de 8% a 49%. Dentro de dois anos de seguimento, 62% a 89% das recidivas são detectadas. Atualmente, os testes usados para detecção de recidiva são a citopatologia da cúpula vaginal e exames de imagem, porém ainda não estão disponíveis testes específicos. O DNA livre-circulante (cf-DNA) representa um biomarcador não-invasivo facilmente obtido no plasma e soro. Vários estudos mostram ser possível detectar e quantificar ácidos nucléicos no plasma de pacientes com câncer e que as alterações no cfDNA potencialmente refletem mudanças que ocorrem durante a tumorigênese. Essa ferramenta diagnóstica não-invasiva pode ser útil no rastreio, prognóstico e monitoramento da resposta ao tratamento do câncer. Portanto, o desenvolvimento e a padronização de testes laboratoriais não invasivos capazes de identificar marcadores tumorais e diagnosticar precocemente a recidiva da doença aumentam a chance de cura através da utilização dos tratamentos preconizados. Sendo assim, este estudo tem o objetivo de detectar o DNA de HPV no plasma de pacientes com CC para avaliar sua potencial utilidade como marcador precoce de recidiva. Um fragmento de tumor e sangue de pacientes com CC, atendidas no ICESP e HC de Barretos, foram coletados antes do tratamento. Entraram no estudo 137 pacientes nas quais o tumor foi positivo para HPV-16 ou 18, sendo 120 amostras positivas para HPV-16 (87,6%), 12 positivas para HPV-18 (8,8%) e cinco positivas para HPV-16 e 18 (3,6%). A média de idade das pacientes deste estudo foi de 52,5 anos. Plasma de 131 pacientes com CC da data do diagnóstico e de 110 pacientes do seguimento foram submetidas ao PCR em Tempo Real HPV tipo específico. A presença do DNA de HPV no plasma pré-tratamento foi observada em 58,8% (77/131) com carga viral variando de 204 cópias/mL a 2.500.000 cópias/mL. A positividade de DNA no plasma pré-tratamento aumentou com o estadio clínico do tumor: I - 45,2%, II - 52,5%, III - 80,0% e IV - 76,9%, (p=0,0189). A presença do DNA de HPV no plasma pós-tratamento foi observada em 27,3% (30/110). A média de tempo das recidivas foi de 3,1 anos (2,7 - 3,5 anos). O DNA de HPV foi positivo até 460 dias antes do diagnóstico clínico da recidiva. As pacientes com DNA de HPV no plasma apresentaram pior prognóstico, tanto sobrevida como o tempo livre de doença, em relação às que foram negativas. Nas pacientes com CC a presença de HPV no plasma de seguimento pode ser um marcador precoce útil para o monitoramento da resposta terapêutica e detecção de pacientes com risco aumentado de recidiva e progressão da doença.
Resumo:
Introducción. El cáncer de cuello de útero (CCU), segunda causa de mortalidad por cáncer en mujeres, está asociado a la infección por virus de papiloma humano (VPH), cuya máxima prevalencia se sitúa entre los 20 y 24 años de edad. Desde 2006 se dispone de una vacuna contra el VPH. El objetivo de este estudio es evaluar los conocimientos sobre CCU, la infección por VPH y su vacuna, valorando su aceptabilidad en población universitaria. Métodos. Estudio transversal sobre 1.750 estudiantes de la Universidad de Alicante (2008) seleccionados al azar, proporcional por sexo y estudios, mediante un cuestionario ad-hoc validado. Se calcularon porcentajes, intervalos de confianza, tablas de contingencia según sexo, edad y tipo de estudios, calculando odds ratios ajustadas (OR). Resultados. Muestra con 58,6% mujeres y 6,6% de estudiantes biosanitarios. Un 87,3% dispuestos a vacunarse frente al VPH, el 94,3% vacunaría a sus hijas, un 48,0% había oído hablar de la vacuna. El 90,6% tiene bajos conocimiento sobre la infección por VPH y un 82,2% sobre la vacuna. Un 22,4% manifiesta conocer la asociación entre VPH y CCU. Las mujeres registran OR mayores en conocimientos y predisposición a vacunarse. La aceptabilidad de la vacuna contra VPH se asocia con el sexo y la confianza en las vacunas como método preventivo, la influencia de los conocimientos previos es escasa sobre la predisposición vacunal. Conclusiones. Alta aceptabilidad de la vacuna en el periodo estudiado. Aumentar la confianza hacia las vacunas puede influir en una mejor predisposición a vacunarse.
Resumo:
A subset of human papillomaviruses (HPVs) promote anogenital malignancy, including cervical cancer, and prevention and treatment strategies that reflect the causal role of HPV are being developed. Vaccines based on HPV virus-like particles induce genotype-specific virus-neutralizing antibody and prevent infection with HPV1. Persistent papillomavirus infection is required for the development of papillomavirus-associated cancer and, therefore, therapeutic vaccines are being developed to eliminate established papillomavirus infection. Such vaccines test principles for the growing field of tumour-antigen-specific immunotherapy. This article reviews progress in the field and draws conclusions for the development of future prophylactic and therapeutic viral vaccines.
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Vaccines to prevent infection with high-risk human papillomaviruses (HPV) will help protect women against cervical cancer, and some are likely to be available within the next year. One vaccine, a quadrivalent vaccine against HPV types 6, 11, 16 and 18 and known as Garadsil ©(Merck &Co., Inc), was approved by the Federal Drug Administration (FDA) for the prevention of cervical cancer, cervical cancer precursors and vulval and vaginal cancer precursors associated with HPV 16 and 18 in June 2006. In addition, the vaccine has been approved for the prevention of genital warts and low grade cervical lesions e.g. cervical intraepithelial neoplasia1. The main vaccines components are recombinant viral capsid proteins assembled into virus-like particles and alum-based adjuvants. If given before HPV infection, the vaccines, which induce HPV type-specific, virus-neutralizing antibodies, have proven safe and highly effective at preventing HPV infection and its clinical consequences, including high-grade cervical lesions. Their use should not immediately alter existing screening programs for cervical cancer, however. Because they incorporate only the 2 HPV types most commonly associated with cervical cancer (HPV-16 and HPV-18), they can only prevent about 70% of cervical cancers. Vaccines to treat existing HPV infection are under development but are unlikely to become clinically available in the near future.
Reformulation of a thermostable broadly protective recombinant vaccine against human papilloma virus
Resumo:
The causal relationship between Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) infection and cervical cancer has motivated the development, and further improvement, of prophylactic vaccines against this virus. 70% of cervical cancers, 80% of which in low-resources countries, are associated to HPV16 and HPV18 infection, with 13 additional HPV types, classified as high-risk, responsible for the remaining 30% of tumors. Current vaccines, Cervarix® (GlaxoSmithKline) and Gardasil®(Merk), are based on virus-like particles (VLP) obtained by self-assembly of the major capsid protein L1. Despite their undisputable immunogenicity and safety, the fact that protection afforded by these vaccines is largely limited to the cognate serotypes included in the vaccine (HPV 16 and 18, plus five additional viral types incorporated into a newly licensed nonavalent vaccine) along with high production costs and reduced thermal stability, are pushing the development of 2nd generation HPV vaccines based on minor capsid protein L2. The increase in protection broadness afforded by the use of L2 cross-neutralizing epitopes, plus a marked reduction of production costs due to bacterial expression of the antigens and a considerable increase in thermal stability could strongly enhance vaccine distribution and usage in low-resource countries. Previous studies from our group identified three tandem repeats of the L2 aa. 20-38 peptide as a strongly immunogenic epitope if exposed on the scaffold protein thioredoxin (Trx). The aim of this thesis work is the improvement of the Trx-L2 vaccine formulation with regard to cross-protection and thermostability, in order to identify an antigen suitable for a phase I clinical trial. By testing Trx from different microorganisms, we selected P. furiosus thioredoxin (PfTrx) as the optimal scaffold because of its sustained peptide epitope constraining capacity and striking thermal stability (24 hours at 100°C). Alternative production systems, such as secretory Trx-L2 expression in the yeast P. pastoris, have also been set-up and evaluated as possible means to further increase production yields, with a concomitant reduction of production costs. Limitations in immune-responsiveness caused by MHC class II polymorphisms –as observed, for example, in different mouse strains- have been overcome by introducing promiscuous T-helper (Th) epitopes, e.g., PADRE (Pan DR Epitope), at both ends of PfTrx. This allowed us to obtain fairly strong immune responses even in mice (C57BL/6) normally unresponsive to the basic Trx-L2 vaccine. Cross-protection was not increased, however. I thus designed, produced and tested a novel multi-epitope formulation consisting of 8 and 11 L2(20-38) epitopes derived from different HPV types, tandemly joined into a single thioredoxin molecule (“concatemers”). To try to further increase immunogenicity, I also fused our 8X and 11X PfTrx-L2 concatemers to the N-terminus of an engineered complement-binding protein (C4bp), capable to spontaneously assemble into ordered hepatmeric structures, previously validated as a molecular adjuvant. Fusion to C4bp indeed improved antigen presentation, with a fairly significant increase in both immunogenicity and cross-protection. Another important issue I addressed, is the reduction of vaccine doses/treatment, which can be achieved by increasing immunogenicity, while also allowing for a delayed release of the antigen. I obtained preliminary, yet quite encouraging results in this direction with the use of a novel, solid-phase vaccine formulation, consisting of the basic PfTrx-L2 vaccine and its C4bp fusion derivative adsorbed to mesoporus silica-rods (MSR).
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Numerosos estudios mencionan que la sobreexpresión de la proteína p16, un marcador biológico que permite identificar lesiones preneoplásicas del epitelio exocervical, tendría una alta asociación con el Papiloma Virus Humano (HPV) de alto riesgo oncogénico. Es un estudio descriptivo correlacional cuyo objetivo fue establecer asociación de las Neoplasias Intraepiteliales Cervicales grado I (NIC I), HPV positivos, con la expresión del p16. Materiales, métodos y resultados: Es un estudio correlacional que se realizó en el período de noviembre de 2009 a noviembre de 2010; se presentaron 256 casos de NIC I de los cuales, 72 fueron HPV positivos; se practicó técnica de p16. La edad promedio de las mujeres fue de 41 años. Se encontró positividad para el p16 en 40 casos (55.6%) y fueron negativos 32 (44.4%). De los casos positivos para p16, los tipos virales más frecuentes fueron los de alto riesgo: 33 (82.5%). El p16 fue valorado en cuantía, distribución e intensidad, estableciéndose relación entre la intensidad del p16 con los virus de alto riesgo (p=0.038). Cuando se analizó la edad y el tipo viral, pacientes entre 20 y 40 años (36 casos, 90%) presentaron genoma de HPV de alto riesgo. Conclusiones: Existió correlación entre la intensidad del p16 con la presencia de HPV de alto riesgo, ayudando a seleccionar grupos con tendencia a la progresión de la enfermedad.
Resumo:
To evaluate an antigen delivery system in which exogenous antigen can target the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I pathway, a single human papillomavirus (HPV) 16 E7 cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) epitope and a single HIV gp160 CTL epitope were separately fused to the C-terminus or bovine papillomavirus 1 (BPV1) L1 sequence to form hybrid BPV1L1 VLPs. Mice immunized with these hybrid VLPs mounted strong CTL responses against the relevant target cells in the absence of any adjuvants. In addition, the CTL responses induced by immunization with BPV1L1/HPV16E7CTL VLPs protected mice against challenge with E7-transformed tumor cells. Furthermore, a high titer-specific antibody response against BPV1L1 VLPs was also induced, and this antiserum could inhibit papillomavirus-induced agglutination of mouse erythrocytes, suggesting that the antibody may recognize conformational determinates relevant to virus neutralization. These data demonstrate that hybrid BPV1L1 VLPs can be used as carriers to target antigenic epitopes to both the MHC class I and class II pathways, providing a promising strategy for the design of vaccines to prevent virus infection, with the potential to elicit therapeutic virus-specific CTL responses. (C) 1998 Academic Press.
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It has been shown previously that recombinant virus-like particles (VLPs) of papillomavirus can induce VLP-specific humoral and cellular immune responses following parenteral administration. To test whether mucosal administration of bovine papillomavirus type 1 (BPV1) VLPs could produce mucosal as well as systemic immune responses to VLPs, 50 mu g chimeric BPV1 VLPs containing an HPV16 E7 CTL epitope (BPVL1/E7 VLP) was administered intranasally to mice. After two immunisations, L1-specific serum IgG and IgA were observed. L1-specific IgG and IgA were also found in respiratory and vaginal secretions. Both serum and mucosal antibody inhibited papillomavirus VLP-induced agglutination of RBC, indicating that the antibody induced by mucosal immunisation may recognize conformational determinants associated with virus neutralisation. For comparison, VLPs were given intramuscularly, and systemic and mucosal immune responses were generally comparable following systemic or mucosal delivery. However, intranasal administration of VLP induced significantly higher local IgA response in lung, suggesting that mucosally delivered HPV VLP may be more effective for mediating local mucosal immune responses. Intranasal immunisation with HPV6b L1 VLP produced VLP-specific T proliferative responses in splenocytes, and immunisation with BPVL1 VLP containing an HPV16 E7 CTL epitope induced E7-specific CTL responses. We conclude that immunisation with papillomavirus VLPs via mucosal and intramuscular routes, without adjuvant, can elicit specific antibody at mucosal surfaces and also systemic VLP epitope specific T cell responses. These findings suggest that mucosally delivered VLPs may offer an alternative HPV VLP vaccine strategy for inducing protective humoral immunity to anogenital HPV infection, together with cell-mediated immune responses to eliminate any cells which become infected. (C) 1998 Academic Press.
Resumo:
Context: Kisspeptin, encoded by the KISS1 gene, is a key stimulatory factor of GnRH secretion and puberty onset. Inactivating mutations of its receptor (KISS1R) cause isolated hypogonadotropic hypogonadism (IHH). A unique KISS1R-activating mutation was described in central precocious puberty (CPP). Objective: Our objective was to investigate KISS1 mutations in patients with idiopathic CPP and normosmic IHH. Patients: Eighty-three children with CPP (77 girls) and 61 patients with IHH (40 men) were studied. The control group consisted of 200 individuals with normal pubertal development. Methods: The promoter region and the three exons of KISS1 were amplified and sequenced. Cells expressing KISS1R were stimulated with synthetic human wild-type or mutant kisspeptin-54 (kp54), and inositol phosphate accumulation was measured. In a second set of experiments, kp54 was preincubated in human serum before stimulation of the cells. Results: Two novel KISS1 missense mutations, p.P74S and p.H90D, were identified in three unrelated children with idiopathic CPP. Both mutations were absent in 400 control alleles. The p.P74S mutation was identified in the heterozygous state in a boy who developed CPP at 1 yr of age. The p.H90D mutation was identified in the homozygous state in two unrelated girls with CPP. In vitro studies revealed that the capacity of the P74S and H90D mutants to stimulate IP production was similar to the wild type. After preincubation of wild-type and mutant kp54 in human serum, the capacity to stimulate signal transduction was significantly greater for P74S compared with the wild type, suggesting that the p.P74S variant is more stable. Only polymorphisms were found in the IHH group. Conclusion: Two KISS1 mutations were identified in unrelated patients with idiopathic CPP. The p.P74S variant was associated with higher kisspeptin resistance to degradation in comparison with the wild type, suggesting a role for this mutation in the precocious puberty phenotype. (J Clin Endocrinol Metab 95: 2276-2280, 2010)