%A Yan Ying, He Yifu, Li Ming %T Analysis of human papillomavirus infection in nonsmall cell lung cancer %0 Journal Article %D 2016 %J Journal of International Oncology %R 10.3760/cma.j.issn.1673-422X.2016.10.004 %P 737-740 %V 43 %N 10 %U {https://gjzlx.sdfmu.edu.cn/CN/abstract/article_10060.shtml} %8 2016-10-08 %X ObjectiveTo detect the infection of human papillomavirus (HPV) in patients with nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and explore the relationship between HPV infection and clinicopathological features. MethodsHPV detection and genotyping in 156 cases of NSCLC were performed using a new liquid chip based on Luminex. Patient clinical characteristics were also recorded, and the relationship between HPV infection and clinicopathological features was studied. ResultsOf the 156 tumorDNA samples tested, 40 (25.6%) cases showed presence of HPVDNA, of which 37 cases were of a highrisk HPV type (16, 18, 33, 58). The differences were statistically significant between the HPVpositive and HPVnegative groups in gender (χ2=4.387, P=0.036), smoking (χ2=8.130, P=0.004), histologic type (χ2=4.075, P=0.044) and lymph node metastasis (χ2=7.082, P=0.008). The differences were not statistically significant between the HPVpositive and HPVnegative groups in age (χ2=0.013, P=0.910), differentiated degree (χ2=1.727, P=0.189), clinical stages (χ2=0.179, P=0.672), distant metastasis (χ2=3.012, P=0.083). Logistic regression analysis revealed that lymph node metastasis alone was an independent predictive factor of HPV infection in NSCLC (OR=0.384, 95%CI: 0.1530.967, P=0.042), and gender (OR=1.402, 95%CI: 0.5223.769, P=0.503), smoking (OR=0.506, 95%CI: 0.1941.322, P=0.506), histologic type (OR=0.393, 95%CI: 0.1330.161, P=0.091) were not independent predictive factors of HPV infection.ConclusionThe infection of HPV presents in part of Chinese NSCLC patients, and HPV infection may be connected with occurrence and development of lung cancer.