TY - JOUR
T1 - E6/E7 Similarity to Human Papillomavirus Prototypes and Performance of HPV Testing by Cobas 4800 HPV Test and Anyplex II HPV HR
AU - the ELEVATE study group
AU - Bernardo Jose Vega Crespo
AU - Godoy, Luani R.
AU - El-Zein, Mariam
AU - Cools, Piet
AU - Padalko, Elizaveta
AU - Verberckmoes, Bo
AU - Degomme, Olivier
AU - Vermandere, Heleen
AU - Arroyo Mühr, Laila Sara
AU - Stosic, Milan S.
AU - Franco, Eduardo L.
AU - Longatto-Filho, Adhemar
AU - Guimarães, Yasmin M.
AU - Dias, Tauana C.
AU - Reis, Rui Manuel
AU - Neira, Vivian Alejandra
AU - Dias, Sónia
AU - Gama, Ana
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Journal of Medical Virology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.
PY - 2025/11
Y1 - 2025/11
N2 - Human papillomavirus (HPV) genotype classification relies on DNA sequence similarity to reference (prototype) sequences. Most HPV assays used for cervical cancer screening were clinically validated against European HPV prototypes. However, the impact of HPV sequence polymorphisms on test performance remains unexplored. We evaluated whether sequence variation in E6/E7 relative to HPV prototypes affects test performance by analyzing cervicovaginal samples from 990 women enrolled (2019-2022) across Belgium, Portugal, Brazil and Ecuador. Samples were tested using cobas, Anyplex, and next-generation sequencing (Ampliseq/Ion Torrent targeting E6/E7). Sequence variation was defined as the proportion of single nucleotide polymorphisms across E6/E7 relative to reference sequence. Sequence variation was, on average, higher in HPV-negative than HPV-positive samples for HPV16 (0.46% vs 0.13%) and HPV18 (0.44% vs 0.37%) using cobas. Similar patterns were observed with Anyplex (HPV16: 0.78% vs 0.13%, HPV33: 0.66% vs 0.40%, HPV58: 0.79% vs 0.53, and HPV66: 1.14% vs 0.25%). For HPV45, sequence variation was, on average, higher in HPV-positive than HPV-negative samples when tested with Anyplex (0.87% vs 0.43%). For HPV types 18, 31, 35, 39, 51, 52, 56, 59 and 68, the mean sequence variation was similar between HPV-negative and HPV-positive samples using Anyplex. Our findings show that sequence variation relative to prototypes may impact test performance.
AB - Human papillomavirus (HPV) genotype classification relies on DNA sequence similarity to reference (prototype) sequences. Most HPV assays used for cervical cancer screening were clinically validated against European HPV prototypes. However, the impact of HPV sequence polymorphisms on test performance remains unexplored. We evaluated whether sequence variation in E6/E7 relative to HPV prototypes affects test performance by analyzing cervicovaginal samples from 990 women enrolled (2019-2022) across Belgium, Portugal, Brazil and Ecuador. Samples were tested using cobas, Anyplex, and next-generation sequencing (Ampliseq/Ion Torrent targeting E6/E7). Sequence variation was defined as the proportion of single nucleotide polymorphisms across E6/E7 relative to reference sequence. Sequence variation was, on average, higher in HPV-negative than HPV-positive samples for HPV16 (0.46% vs 0.13%) and HPV18 (0.44% vs 0.37%) using cobas. Similar patterns were observed with Anyplex (HPV16: 0.78% vs 0.13%, HPV33: 0.66% vs 0.40%, HPV58: 0.79% vs 0.53, and HPV66: 1.14% vs 0.25%). For HPV45, sequence variation was, on average, higher in HPV-positive than HPV-negative samples when tested with Anyplex (0.87% vs 0.43%). For HPV types 18, 31, 35, 39, 51, 52, 56, 59 and 68, the mean sequence variation was similar between HPV-negative and HPV-positive samples using Anyplex. Our findings show that sequence variation relative to prototypes may impact test performance.
KW - Anyplex II HPV assay
KW - cobas 4800 HPV test
KW - HPV screening
KW - human papillomavirus
KW - next generation sequencing
KW - performance
KW - polymorphism
KW - quality assurance
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105020246648
U2 - 10.1002/jmv.70668
DO - 10.1002/jmv.70668
M3 - Artículo
C2 - 41147664
AN - SCOPUS:105020246648
SN - 0146-6615
VL - 97
JO - Journal of Medical Virology
JF - Journal of Medical Virology
IS - 11
M1 - e70668
ER -