Abstract

Infection of the uterine cervix by human papilloma viruses (HPV) may be associated with cervical pre-cancer and invasive cervical carcinoma if left untreated. With advance in molecular techniques, it has become easier to detect the resence of HPV DNA long before the appearance of any lesion. This study concerned cervical scrape samples of 310 married non-pregnant women attending a gynecology outpatient department for both Pap and PCR testing to detect HPV DNA. Nested PCR using primers for L1 consensus gene with My9/My11 and GP6+/ GP5+followed by multiplex PCR were carried out to detect HPV 16 and HPV18. HPV prevalence was 11.9% out of which 3.67% cases of negative for intra-epithelial lesion or malignancy (NILM) and in 71.1% (27/38) of atypical cervical smears were HPV positive. There was increasing trend of high-risk-HPV positivity (HR HPV 16 and 18), from 20% in benign cytology (NILM) to 42.9 % in LSIL, 71.41% in HSIL and 100% in SCC. There was highly significant association of HPV infection with cervical lesion (x2=144.0, p<0.01) and also with type specific HPV prevalence (x2=7.761*(p<0.05).

Highlights

  • Persistent infection with one of about 15 genotypes of carcinogenic human papilloma virus (HPV) causes progression to cervical cancer in almost all cases

  • Infection with virus like human papilloma virus has been implicated for invasive cervical carcinoma (Ferlay et al, 2010)

  • Though most HPV infections are asymptomatic and cleared within 2 years; persistent genital HPV infection can lead to clinical disease including anogenital warts, cervical intra-epithelial neoplasia (CIN), cervical carcinoma and other anogenital cancers

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Summary

Introduction

Persistent infection with one of about 15 genotypes of carcinogenic human papilloma virus (HPV) causes progression to cervical cancer in almost all cases. Nested multiplex PCR detected HPV in 98% cases of cervical cancer in a study carried out in a cancer hospital located in Kamrup Urbun district of Assam, a populous state in north east India (Das et al, 2013). On this background, the study was carried out with the aim to analyse the frequency of human papilloma virus infection in women of reproductive age group attending the tertiary level of medical facility and to correlate the type of cervical cellular change evoked by HPV infection

Materials and Methods
Findings
Over all HPV prevalence in general population was
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