Investigator

N. D. Tran

Lecturer · University of Medicine and Pharmacy Ho Chi Minh City, Faculty of Public Health

NDTN. D. Tran
Papers(1)
High Prevalence of Hu…
Collaborators(1)
H. N. Vo
Institutions(2)
Unknown InstitutionUniversity of Medicin…

Papers

High Prevalence of Human Papillomavirus in Vulvar Cancer Among Vietnamese Women: Implications for Vaccination Strategies

ABSTRACTBackgroundVulvar cancer (VC) is rare; however, its incidence has steadily increased, likely due to increased human papillomavirus (HPV) infections. HPV infection rates vary significantly with age and ethnicity. Data on the VC incidence in Vietnam are limited.ObjectivesThis study aimed to determine HPV infection rates and high‐risk HPV types (HR‐HPVs) and to model HPV causality in co‐infections using a Proportional Attribution (PropAttr) model in Vietnamese VC patients.MethodsWe investigated primary VC cases (invasive carcinoma) diagnosed at our hospital during 2020–2021. Tumor samples were tested for HPV using quantitative polymerase chain reaction. Recurrent cases and poor‐quality preserved tumor samples were excluded. HPV infection status, HR‐HPV status, and relevant clinicopathological features were analyzed. To estimate the most likely causative HPV genotype in co‐infected lesions, the PropAttr model was applied, attributing genotypes based on their prevalence in mono‐infections. Model reliability was validated using Spearman's correlation analysis.ResultsOf the 95 cases, 95% were squamous cell carcinoma, and 40% were clinical stage I. The HPV infection rate was approximately 77% (68.4–85.2), and HPV‐16 was the most common subtype. Patients infected with HPV (mean age: 62.8) were younger than those who were not infected (mean age: 71.4) in univariate (p = 0.004) and multivariate (p < 0.001) analyses. While the vulvar pathohistological type was significantly associated with HPV infection in multivariate analysis (p < 0.001), no significant relationship was observed with other factors in univariate and multivariate analyses. The PropAttr model showed significant correlations between attribution estimates and mono‐infection prevalence (HPV‐16: ρ = 0.806, p < 0.001; HPV‐18: ρ = 0.992, p < 0.001; 12 other HR‐HPVs: ρ = 0.880, p < 0.001). A strong negative correlation between HPV‐16 and 12 other HR‐HPVs (ρ = −0.751, p < 0.001) suggested competitive interactions in genotype assignment.ConclusionsThe HPV infection rate in Vietnamese VC cases was substantially higher than in other Asian populations, indicating a significant public health burden. Our findings reinforce the importance of expanding national HPV vaccination programs and incorporating advanced attribution models to improve HPV‐related cancer risk assessment.

72Works
1Papers
1Collaborators
Vulvar NeoplasmsCarcinoma, Squamous CellCoinfectionMental Disorders

Positions

2011–

Lecturer

University of Medicine and Pharmacy Ho Chi Minh City · Faculty of Public Health

Education

2017

PhD in Human Care Science

University of Tsukuba · Environmental Epidemiology lab

2014

Master of Public Health

University of Tsukuba · Faculty of Medicine; Molecular and Genetics Epidemiology lab

2010

Bachelor of Public Health

University of Medicine and Pharmacy Ho Chi Minh City · Environmental Health

Country

VN

Keywords
Environmental ScienceMedicineBiochemistryGenetics and Molecular Biology
Links & IDs
0000-0002-5287-0265

Scopus: 56176864100