Clinical and molecular characteristics of squamous cell carcinomas from Fanconi anemia patients

HJT Van Zeeburg, PJF Snijders, T Wu… - JNCI: Journal of the …, 2008 - academic.oup.com
HJT Van Zeeburg, PJF Snijders, T Wu, E Gluckman, J Soulier, J Surralles, M Castella…
JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 2008academic.oup.com
Fanconi anemia is a recessively inherited disease that is characterized by congenital
abnormalities, bone marrow failure, and a predisposition to develop cancer, particularly
squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs) in the head and neck and anogenital regions. Previous
studies of Fanconi anemia SCCs, mainly from US patients, revealed the presence of high-
risk human papillomavirus (HPV) DNA in 21 (84%) of 25 tumors analyzed. We examined a
panel of 21 SCCs mainly from European Fanconi anemia patients (n= 19 FA patients; 16 …
Abstract
Fanconi anemia is a recessively inherited disease that is characterized by congenital abnormalities, bone marrow failure, and a predisposition to develop cancer, particularly squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs) in the head and neck and anogenital regions. Previous studies of Fanconi anemia SCCs, mainly from US patients, revealed the presence of high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) DNA in 21 (84%) of 25 tumors analyzed. We examined a panel of 21 SCCs mainly from European Fanconi anemia patients (n = 19 FA patients; 16 head and neck squamous cell carcinomas [HNSCCs], 2 esophageal SCCs, and 3 anogenital SCCs) for their clinical and molecular characteristics, including patterns of allelic loss, TP53 mutations, and the presence of HPV DNA by GP5+/6+ polymerase chain reaction. HPV DNA was detected in only two (10%) of 21 tumors (both anogenital SCCs) but in none of the 16 HNSCCs. Of the 18 tumors analyzed, 10 contained a TP53 mutation. The patterns of allelic loss were comparable to those generally found in sporadic SCCs. Our data show that HPV does not play a major role in squamous cell carcinogenesis in this cohort of Fanconi anemia patients and that the Fanconi anemia SCCs are genetically similar to sporadic SCCs despite having a different etiology.
Oxford University Press