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Evaluation of Human Papillomavirus Type 5 on Frozen Sections of Multiple Lesions from Transplant Recipients with in situ Hybridization and Non-lsotopic Probes
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1992
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Transplant RecipientsTransplantation MedicinePathologyDermatologyCancer-associated VirusMultiple LesionsHuman Papillomavirus VaccinesPublic HealthSitu HybridizationCancer ResearchRadiologySkin CancerTransplantationHpv Dna 5VirologyDermatopathologyCervical CancerHpv DnaMedicinePrecancerous Lesions
Transplant recipients are at high risk to develop multiple cutaneous lesions after grafting. The frequency of the potentially oncogenic human papillomavirus (HPV) type 5 DNA was evaluated in cutaneous lesions taken from sun-exposed areas in transplant recipients (92 lesions and 5 samples from normal skin) and compared with a nontransplanted population (22 lesions and 7 samples from normal skin) using in situ hybridization and biotinylated probes to HPV types 1, 2, 5, 16 and 18. HPV type 5 DNA was identified in 8/92 cutaneous lesions of transplanted recipients: 3 warts, 1 case of seborrheic keratosis, 2 actinic keratoses and 2 keratoacanthomas. HPV type 5 DNA was not detected in 27 malignant tumors (8 basal cell carcinomas and 19 squamous cell carcinomas) from transplant recipients. HPV DNA type 5 was detected in only 1 case of squamous cell carcinoma from the general population. The presence of HPV DNA 5 was confirmed with Southern blotting in 2 out of 6 cases from transplant recipients. The reaction was negative with the squamous cell carcinoma from nontransplant recipients. These data indicate that the presence of HPV DNA type 5 is not very frequent; it can be detected with in situ hybridization and nonisotopic probe, which is easier to handle than Southern blot.