High-risk human papillomavirus screening and testing with immunohistochemical surrogate biomarkers: an alternative to polymerase chain reaction

Authors

  • Louis-Jacques Jean van Bogaert National Health Laboratory Service

Keywords:

human papilloma virus, screening, testing, surrogate biomarkers

Abstract

The vacuolisation and ballooning of cervical squamous cells, presently known as koilocytosis, was first described in 1957 by FW Stewart, who defined it as “warty atypia” (a hint towards a possible viral link). The presence of viral particles in the nuclei of epithelial cells of condylomata was first documented electron microscopically by AEG Dunn and NM Ogilvie in 1968. Similarities between condylomata and cervical precancerous lesions led to the hypothesis that the papovavirus causing condylomata may be a contributory factor in cervical carcinogenesis. This hypothesis was confirmed in 1978 by Laverty et al, with the electron microscopic identification of viral particles consistent with a papillomavirus, in a preinvasive lesion in an immunosuppressed woman.1

Author Biography

  • Louis-Jacques Jean van Bogaert, National Health Laboratory Service
    MD, MMed (Obstet Gynaecol), MMed (Anat Path), MPhil, DPhil, PhD National Health Laboratory Service and University of Limpopo Polokwane South Africa

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Published

2012-02-10

Issue

Section

Opinion