Abstract

BackgroundHuman papillomavirus type 97 (HPV97) DNA was detected in nearly 5% of anal samples collected from HIV-seropositive men living in Montreal, Canada. The rate of detection of HPV97 in the genital tract of Canadian women is unknown. Whether HPV97 is a local epidemic in HIV-seropositive men living in Montreal is also unknown. The prevalence of human papillomavirus type 97 (HPV97) was assessed in cervicovaginal cells from women living in Canada and in anal samples from HIV-seropositive men living in Toronto.FindingsCervicovaginal lavages collected from 904 women (678 HIV-seropositive, 226 HIV-seronegative) women living in Canada and anal cells collected from 123 HIV-seropositive men living in Toronto were tested for the presence of HPV97 with PCR. HPV97-positive samples were further tested by PCR-sequencing for molecular variant analysis to assess if all HPV97-positive men were infected with the same strain. All cervicovaginal samples were negative for HPV97. HPV97 was detected in anal samples from 6 HIV-seropositive men (4.9%, 95% confidence interval 2.0-10.5%), of whom five had high-grade and one had low-grade anal intraepithelial neoplasia, in addition to 2 to 8 HPV genital genotypes per sample. Four HPV97 variants were defined by four variation sites in the viral control region.ConclusionThese findings indicate that HPV97 infects in the anal canal of HIV-seropositive men but is not detected in the genital tract of women.

Highlights

  • Human papillomavirus type 97 (HPV97) DNA was detected in nearly 5% of anal samples collected from HIV-seropositive men living in Montreal, Canada

  • These findings indicate that HPV97 infects in the anal canal of HIV-seropositive men but is not detected in the genital tract of women

  • HPV97 has been detected with other high-risk genotypes in biopsies with high-grade anal intraepithelial neoplasia (AIN), it has not been formally associated yet in

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Summary

Introduction

Human papillomavirus type 97 (HPV97) DNA was detected in nearly 5% of anal samples collected from HIV-seropositive men living in Montreal, Canada. The rate of detection of HPV97 in the genital tract of Canadian women is unknown. The prevalence of human papillomavirus type 97 (HPV97) was assessed in cervicovaginal cells from women living in Canada and in anal samples from HIV-seropositive men living in Toronto. We set out to assess if HPV97 DNA could be detected in cervicovaginal lavages collected from women living in Canada at high-risk of or infected with HIV. We explored if HPV97 infection could be detected in the anal canal of HIV-seropositive men living in another Canadian city by testing anal samples collected from HIV-seropositive men living from Toronto

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