Velazquez Elsa F, Bock Adelaida, Soskin Ana, Codas Ricardo, Arbo Manuel, Cubilla Antonio L
Department of Pathology, New York University Medical Center, New York, NY 10016, USA.
Am J Surg Pathol. 2003 Jul;27(7):994-8. doi: 10.1097/00000478-200307000-00015.
Difficulty in foreskin retraction and phimosis are risk factors for penile carcinoma that may be related to the anatomically variable length of the foreskin. This observation has stimulated us to postulate the hypothesis that foreskin length is related to penile cancer. To compare the foreskin in the general population and patients with penile cancer, an anatomic classification of foreskin was designed. We examined the foreskin of 215 uncircumcised males without cancer (age range 15-93 years) and the foreskin of 23 patients with cancer (age range 31-90 years). Foreskin types were classified as long (with the preputial orifice located beyond glans meatus and entirely covering the glans), medium (with the preputial orifice located between meatus and glans corona), and short (with the preputial orifice located between corona and coronal sulcus). Phimosis was defined as a nonretractable prepuce of the long type. We found that 77% of noncancer population cases had long foreskin and that only 7% of these cases were phimotic. Cancer patients showed long foreskin in 78% of the cases, and phimosis was significantly frequent in this group (52%) as compared with the other (p <0.001). Coexistence of a long foreskin and phimosis may explain the high incidence of penile cancer in some geographic regions. To better document these findings, a comparison of foreskin types in countries with high and low incidence of penile cancer will be interesting. However, because phimosis appears to be a major factor, the presence of long foreskin may be a necessary but not a sufficient condition for cancer development. For these reasons we support preventive circumcision in patients with long and phimotic foreskins living in high-risk areas. Cancers not related to long foreskins and phimosis may be causally different.
包皮回缩困难和包茎是阴茎癌的危险因素,可能与包皮在解剖学上的可变长度有关。这一观察结果促使我们提出包皮长度与阴茎癌有关的假设。为了比较普通人群和阴茎癌患者的包皮情况,设计了一种包皮的解剖学分类方法。我们检查了215名未行包皮环切术的无癌男性(年龄范围15 - 93岁)的包皮以及23名癌症患者(年龄范围31 - 90岁)的包皮。包皮类型分为长型(包皮口位于龟头尿道口之外且完全覆盖龟头)、中型(包皮口位于尿道口和冠状沟之间)和短型(包皮口位于冠状沟和冠状沟之间)。包茎定义为长型包皮不可回缩。我们发现,77%的非癌人群病例有长包皮,其中只有7%的病例为包茎。癌症患者中78%的病例有长包皮,与其他组相比,该组包茎明显更常见(52%)(p <0.001)。长包皮和包茎并存可能解释了某些地理区域阴茎癌的高发病率。为了更好地记录这些发现,比较阴茎癌高发病率国家和低发病率国家的包皮类型将很有意思。然而,由于包茎似乎是一个主要因素,长包皮的存在可能是癌症发生的必要但非充分条件。出于这些原因,我们支持对生活在高危地区的长包皮和包茎患者进行预防性包皮环切术。与长包皮和包茎无关的癌症可能在病因上有所不同。