The significance of extensive HPV genotyping for cervical high-grade neoplasia among women with atypical glandular cells.

Journal: American Journal Of Clinical Pathology
Published:
Abstract

Objective: To examine the associated risk of cervical intraepithelial neoplasm grade 3+ (CIN3+) lesions in patients with AGC and extensive human papillomavirus (HPV) genotyping.

Methods: Cases with atypical glandular cell (AGC) interpretation on a Papanicolaou (Pap) test were identified along with associated extensive HPV genotyping and histologic follow-up results.

Results: Within this cohort of 469,694 Pap tests, 0.4% were diagnosed as AGCs. In total, 1267 cases had concurrent high-risk HPV (hrHPV) genotyping, and 40.3% were hrHPV positive. The percentage of AGC cases with cervical CIN3+ on histologic follow-up was 52.2% when hrHPV was positive, whereas it was 4.9% with a negative hrHPV result. The top 5 hrHPV genotypes associated with cervical CIN3+ in this cohort were HPV16, HPV18, HPV58, HPV52, and HPV33. Indeed, 92.8% of the hrHPV-associated CIN3+ lesions identified in this cohort were positive for at least one of these HPV genotypes. The sensitivity of detecting cervical CIN3+ lesions was 85.6% with the top 5 hrHPV genotypes (HPV16/18/58/52/33) and only increased to 89.0% when the additional 12 genotypes were included.

Conclusions: In patients with an AGC Pap, the risk of having a cervical CIN3+ lesion is greatly increased by positivity for hrHPV types 16, 18, 58, 52, and/or 33. Incorporating comprehensive HPV genotyping into AGC cytology allows for refined risk stratification and more tailored management strategies.

Authors
Xiao Tang, Megan Zilla, Wei Jiang, Yanmei He, David Starr, Lei Li, Lingling Tong, Cheng Wang, Wei Wang, Kaixuan Yang, Rutie Yin, Chengquan Zhao