Cancers (Oct 2022)

Penile Squamous Cell Carcinomas in Sub-Saharan Africa and Europe: Differential Etiopathogenesis

  • Carolina Manzotti,
  • Laurina Chulo,
  • Ricardo López del Campo,
  • Isabel Trias,
  • Marta del Pino,
  • Ofélia Saúde,
  • Iracema Basílio,
  • Nelson Tchamo,
  • Lucilia Lovane,
  • Cesaltina Lorenzoni,
  • Fabiola Fernandes,
  • Adela Saco,
  • Maria Teresa Rodrigo-Calvo,
  • Lorena Marimon,
  • Mamudo R. Ismail,
  • Carla Carrilho,
  • Inmaculada Ribera-Cortada,
  • Jaume Ordi,
  • Natalia Rakislova

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14215284
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 21
p. 5284

Abstract

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Penile squamous cell carcinomas (PSCC) are classified by the World Health Organization into two categories based on their relationship with the human papillomavirus (HPV): HPV-associated and HPV-independent. We compared a cohort of PSCC from Mozambique, a sub-Saharan country in southeast Africa with a high prevalence of HPV and HIV infection, and Spain, a country in southwestern Europe with a low prevalence of HPV and HIV, to study the distribution of the etiopathogenic categories of these tumors in both sites. A total of 79 PSCC were included in the study (28 from Mozambique and 51 from Spain). All cases underwent HPV-DNA polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing, genotyping, and immunohistochemistry for p16 and p53. Any PSCC showing either p16 overexpression or HPV-DNA in PCR analysis was considered HPV-associated. Overall, 40/79 (50.6%) tumors were classified as HPV-associated and 39 (49.4%) as HPV-independent. The two sites showed marked differences: 25/28 (89.3%) tumors from Mozambique and only 15/51 (29.4%) from Spain were HPV-associated (p p = 0.8). On average, patients from Mozambique were almost two decades younger than those from Spain (mean age 50.9 ± 14.9 and 69.2 ± 13.3, respectively [p < 0.001]). In conclusion, significant etiopathogenic differences between PSCC in Mozambique and Spain were observed, with a remarkably high prevalence of HPV-associated tumors in Mozambique and a relatively low prevalence in Spain. These data may have important consequences for primary prevention of PSCC worldwide.

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