4.2 Article

Virome Analysis Reveals No Association of Head and Neck Vascular Anomalies with an Active Viral Infection

Journal

IN VIVO
Volume 32, Issue 6, Pages 1323-1331

Publisher

INT INST ANTICANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.21873/invivo.11382

Keywords

Virome; vascular anomaly; head and neck

Funding

  1. Kempkes Stiftung (Philipps-Universitat Marburg, Marburg, Germany)

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Background/Aim: Vascular anomalies encompass different vascular malformations [arteriovenous (AVM), lymphatic (LM), venous lymphatic (VLM), venous (VM)] and vascular tumors such as hemangiomas (HA). The pathogenesis of vascular anomalies is still poorly understood. Viral infection was speculated as a possible underlying cause. Materials and Methods: A total of 13 human vascular anomalies and three human skin control tissues were used for viral analysis. RNA derived from AVM (n=4) and normal skin control (n=3) tissues was evaluated by RNA sequencing. The Virome Capture Sequencing Platform for Vertebrate Viruses (VirCapSeq-VERT) was deployed on 10 tissues with vascular anomalies (2xAVM, 1xHA, 1xLM, 2xVLM, 4xVM). Results: RNA sequencing did not show any correlation of AVM with viral infection. By deploying VirCapSeq-VERT, no consistent viral association was seen in the tested tissues. Conclusion: The analysis does not point to the presence of an active viral infection in vascular anomalies. However, transient earlier viral infections, e.g. during pregnancy, cannot be excluded with this approach.

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