4.6 Review

Immunopathogenesis of HPV-Associated Cancers and Prospects for Immunotherapy

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 9, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v9090254

Keywords

human papillomavirus; cervical cancer; skin cancer; epidermodysplasia verruciformis; immune evasion; chronic inflammation; IL-6; JAK-STAT3; immunotherapy; immunoscore

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Funding

  1. Deutsche Krebshilfe [109752]
  2. Saarland Staatskanzlei [WT/2LFFP14/15]
  3. Gemeinsamer Bundesausschuss [01VSF16050]

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Human papillomavirus (HPV) infection is a causative factor for various cancers of the anogenital region and oropharynx, and is supposed to play an important cofactor role for skin carcinogenesis. Evasion from immunosurveillance favors viral persistence. However, there is evidence that the mere presence of oncogenic HPV is not sufficient for malignant progression and that additional tumor-promoting steps are required. Recent studies have demonstrated that HPV-transformed cells actively promote chronic stromal inflammation and conspire with cells in the local microenvironment to promote carcinogenesis. This review highlights the complex interplay between HPV-infected cells and the local immune microenvironment during oncogenic HPV infection, persistence, and malignant progression, and discusses new prospects for diagnosis and immunotherapy of HPV-associated cancers.

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