Brief Report: The Virome of Bladder Tumors Arising in People Living With HIV
- PMID: 37884054
- PMCID: PMC10662940
- DOI: 10.1097/QAI.0000000000003283
Brief Report: The Virome of Bladder Tumors Arising in People Living With HIV
Abstract
Background: People living with HIV (PLWH) have elevated risk for developing virus-related cancers. Bladder cancer risk is not increased in PLWH but is elevated among immunosuppressed solid organ transplant recipients (SOTRs). BK polyomavirus and, to a lesser extent, other viruses have been detected in bladder cancers from SOTRs.
Objective: To characterize the virome of bladder tumors in PLWH.
Design: Retrospective case series.
Methods: We sequenced DNA and RNA from archived formalin-fixed bladder tumors from PLWH. Nonhuman reads were assembled and matched to a database of known viruses.
Results: Fifteen bladder tumors from PLWH (13 carcinomas, 2 benign tumors) were evaluated. Fourteen tumors were in men, and the median age at diagnosis was 59 years (median CD4 count 460 cells/mm3). All but 1 tumor yielded both sufficient DNA and RNA. One bladder cancer, arising in a 52-year-old man with a CD4 count of 271 cells/mm3, manifested diverse Alphatorquevirus DNA and RNA sequences. A second cancer arising in a 58-year-old male former smoker (CD4 count of 227 cells/mm3) also showed Alphatorquevirus and Gammatorquevirus DNA sequences. Neither tumor exhibited viral integration.
Conclusions: Alphatorqueviruses and Gammatorqueviruses are anelloviruses, which have also been detected in bladder cancers from SOTRs, but anelloviruses are common infections, and detection may simply reflect increased abundance in the setting of immunosuppression. The lack of detection of BK polyomavirus among bladder tumors from PLWH parallels the lower level of bladder cancer risk seen in PLWH compared with SOTRs, indirectly supporting a role for BK polyomavirus in causing the excess risk in SOTRs.
Copyright © 2023 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors have no funding or conflicts of interest to disclose.
Similar articles
-
BK virus-associated urinary bladder carcinoma in transplant recipients: report of 2 cases, review of the literature, and proposed pathogenetic model.Hum Pathol. 2013 May;44(5):908-17. doi: 10.1016/j.humpath.2012.09.019. Epub 2013 Jan 11. Hum Pathol. 2013. PMID: 23317548 Review.
-
Longitudinal alterations in the urinary virome of kidney transplant recipients are influenced by BK viremia and patient sex.Microbiol Spectr. 2024 Aug 6;12(8):e0405523. doi: 10.1128/spectrum.04055-23. Epub 2024 Jun 25. Microbiol Spectr. 2024. PMID: 38916313 Free PMC article.
-
Evidence for virus-mediated oncogenesis in bladder cancers arising in solid organ transplant recipients.Elife. 2023 Mar 24;12:e82690. doi: 10.7554/eLife.82690. Elife. 2023. PMID: 36961501 Free PMC article.
-
Lack of BK virus DNA sequences in most transitional-cell carcinomas of the bladder.Int J Cancer. 2007 Mar 15;120(6):1248-51. doi: 10.1002/ijc.22494. Int J Cancer. 2007. PMID: 17192899
-
BK Polyomavirus-Associated Urothelial Carcinoma of the Bladder with a Background of BK Polyomavirus Nephropathy in a Kidney Transplant Recipient.Nephron. 2023;147 Suppl 1:53-60. doi: 10.1159/000531822. Epub 2023 Aug 2. Nephron. 2023. PMID: 37531946 Review.
References
-
- Grulich AE, van Leeuwen MT, Falster MO, Vajdic CM. Incidence of cancers in people with HIV/AIDS compared with immunosuppressed transplant recipients: a meta-analysis. Lancet 2007;370(9581):59–67. - PubMed
-
- Papadimitriou JC, Randhawa P, Rinaldo CH, Drachenberg CB, Alexiev B, Hirsch HH. BK Polyomavirus Infection and Renourinary Tumorigenesis. Am J Transplant 2016;16(2):398–406. - PubMed
-
- Kenan DJ, Mieczkowski PA, Latulippe E, Cote I, Singh HK, Nickeleit V. BK Polyomavirus Genomic Integration and Large T Antigen Expression: Evolving Paradigms in Human Oncogenesis. Am J Transplant 2017;17(6):1674–80. - PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
Research Materials