Patients with HPV associated (HPV+ve) head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), particularly oropharyngeal cancer, show better treatment response, higher survival rates, and lower risks of recurrence as compared to… Click to show full abstract
Patients with HPV associated (HPV+ve) head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), particularly oropharyngeal cancer, show better treatment response, higher survival rates, and lower risks of recurrence as compared to HPV-ve HNSCC patients. Despite increased sensitivity to treatment modality, HPV+ve HNSCC patients are subjected to the same intensive anti-cancer therapy as HPV-ve HNSCC patients and thus subjecting them to unwarranted long-term toxicity. To identify predictive biomarkers for risk-stratification, we have analyzed the mutational spectrum, and the evidence suggests that gain-of-function mutations in the NRF2 pathway are highly prevalent in HPV-ve HNSCC. At the same time, it is rare in HPV+ve HNSCC tumors. We have reviewed the importance of gain-of-NRF2 function and loss of p53 in the prognosis of HNSCC patients and discussed a predictive scoring system using a combination of HPV status (p16), NRF2 pathway and p53 to stratify HPV+ve HNSCC into good versus poor responders, which could immensely help in guiding future de-escalation treatment approaches in patients with HPV+ve HNSCC.
               
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