Detection of five different human papillomavirus types in cervical lesions by in situ hybridization. A study of 110 cases using sulfonated probes.
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Abstrakcyjny
Several findings suggest an etiologic relationship between genital tract squamous cell carcinoma and certain types of human papillomavirus (HPV). Detection of these HPV types in cervical lesions considered as preneoplastic states (ie, cervical intraepithelial neoplasia or CIN) is extremely important but difficult because the morphology of these states is highly heterogeneous and clinical course is rarely predictable. In situ hybridization (ISH) is the only technique allowing correlation between HPV type and tissue or cell morphology. In this report, 110 biopsy specimens from uterine cervix lesions were studied: 66 CIN, 10 invasive carcinoma, 28 metaplasia, and six condyloma acuminata. A new ISH technique based on direct modification of DNA probes by sulfonation was used. The hybridized DNA was revealed first by a specific monoclonal antibody against sulfonated DNA, and then by an alkaline phosphatase system. In order to determine the sensitivity level of this method, 14 biopsy specimens were also submitted to Southern blot hybridization. Five probes were used separately (HPV 6, 11, 16, 18, and 33) for each biopsy specimen. Results of ISH were correlated with morphologic criteria such as number of koilocytes and mitoses. Oncogenic HPV was found exclusively in CIN. The number of labeled cells varied with CIN grade. These data suggest that, whatever the grade, CIN represents a unique preneoplastic process, and that HPV replication depends on the squamous maturation of the pathologic epithelium.