Molecular basis for advances in cervical screening.

John Doorbar, Heather Cubie
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引用次数: 21

Abstract

Human papillomaviruses (HPVs) cause cervical lesions, which can, in some instances, progress to high-grade neoplasia and cancer. Around half a million cases of cervical cancer occur each year, with most occurring in developing countries where cervical cancer is a major cause of cancer-related death. The reduction in cervical cancer incidence in developed countries is largely attributed to the introduction of cervical screening. Cervical screening currently depends on the identification by cytology of abnormalities in cells taken from the surface of the cervix. The standard Pap test was developed >50 years ago, and despite modifications, still forms the basis of the test currently in use in most routine screening laboratories. Advances in our understanding of the molecular mechanisms that lead to the development of cervical cancer have been slow to impact on screening, despite the relatively high false-negative rates that can be associated with the conventional Pap smear. Improvements in screening strategies fall into a number of categories. Methods that improve cell presentation and attempt to eliminate artefacts/obscuring debris can be combined with image analysis systems in order to enhance diagnostic accuracy. Such approaches still rely on cytological evaluation and do not incorporate advances in our knowledge of how HPV causes cancer. By contrast, markers of virus infection or cell cycle entry, particularly those that offer some degree of prognostic significance, may be able to highlight abnormal cells more reliably than cytology, and could be combined with cytology to improve the detection rate. Our understanding of the molecular biology of HPV infection and the organization of the HPV life-cycle during cancer progression provides a rational basis for marker selection. The general assumption that persistent active infection by high-risk HPV types is the true precursor of cervical cancer provides the rationale for HPV DNA testing in conjunction with enhanced cytology, while the development of RNA-based approaches should allow active infections to be distinguished from those that are latent. The detection in superficial cells of marker combinations at the level of RNA or protein has the potential to predict disease status more precisely than the detection of markers in isolation. There is also a need for better prognostic markers if the predictive value of screening is to be improved. The potential to control infection by vaccination should reduce the incidence of HPV-associated neoplasia in the population, and this may cause a change in the way that screening is carried out. Nevertheless, the lack of a therapeutic vaccine, and the difficulties associated with eliminating infection by multiple high-risk HPV types, means that some form of screening will still be required as a preventive measure for the control of cervical cancer for the foreseeable future.

子宫颈筛查进展的分子基础。
人乳头瘤病毒(hpv)引起宫颈病变,在某些情况下,可以发展为高级别瘤变和癌症。每年大约发生50万例宫颈癌病例,其中大多数发生在发展中国家,在这些国家,宫颈癌是癌症相关死亡的主要原因。在发达国家,子宫颈癌发病率的下降主要归功于子宫颈普查的实施。宫颈筛查目前依赖于细胞学鉴定从子宫颈表面取出的异常细胞。标准的巴氏试验是在50多年前开发的,尽管经过修改,但仍是目前大多数常规筛查实验室使用的基础试验。尽管传统子宫颈抹片检查的假阴性率相对较高,但我们对导致宫颈癌发展的分子机制的理解进展缓慢,无法对筛查产生影响。筛查策略的改进可分为若干类别。改善细胞呈现和试图消除伪影/模糊碎片的方法可以与图像分析系统相结合,以提高诊断准确性。这些方法仍然依赖于细胞学评估,并没有纳入我们对HPV如何导致癌症的知识的进展。相比之下,病毒感染或细胞周期进入的标记,特别是那些具有一定程度预后意义的标记,可能比细胞学更可靠地突出异常细胞,并且可以与细胞学相结合以提高检出率。我们对HPV感染的分子生物学和肿瘤进展过程中HPV生命周期组织的理解为标志物选择提供了合理的依据。一般认为高危型HPV持续活动性感染是宫颈癌的真正前兆,这为结合增强细胞学的HPV DNA检测提供了理论依据,而基于rna的方法的发展应该可以将活动性感染与潜伏性感染区分开来。在浅表细胞中检测RNA或蛋白质水平上的标记组合,有可能比单独检测标记更准确地预测疾病状态。如果要提高筛查的预测价值,还需要更好的预后标记物。通过接种疫苗控制感染的潜力应该会减少人群中hpv相关肿瘤的发病率,这可能会导致筛查方式的改变。然而,由于缺乏治疗性疫苗,以及在消除多种高危型人乳头瘤病毒感染方面存在困难,因此在可预见的未来,仍需要进行某种形式的筛查,作为控制宫颈癌的预防措施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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