Background: Loss of p53 tumor suppressor function is a critical step in the development of diverse malignancies, including skin cancers in nonimmunosuppressed patients where UV-specific p53 gene mutations have been identified. In tumors associated with human papillomavirus (HPV), such as cervical carcinoma, p53 may be inactivated instead by binding to a viral oncoprotein.
Objective: Our purpose was to examine the hypothesis that HPV may play an analogous role in the development of posttransplant skin cancer.
Methods: p53 Immunoreactivity, suggestive of p53 gene mutation, was examined by immunocytochemistry. Oncogenic HPV DNA was detected by polymerase chain reaction.
Results: Comparable p53 immunoreactivity was seen in skin tumors from both transplant and nontransplant patients. HPV DNA was not demonstrated in any tumor specimen.
Conclusion: Our data do not implicate oncogenic HPV in posttransplant skin cancer. p53 Gene mutation, rather than HPV-induced p53 degradation, may be more significant in the development of these tumors.