Abstract

Abstract Introduction/Objective HPV-driven cervical cancer is one of the leading causes of cancer-related deaths in women. More African American (AA) and Hispanic women are reported to get HPV-associated cervical cancer than women of other ethnicities, possibly because of decreased access to testing or treatment. High variation has been reported in the attribution of specific HPV genotypes among various ethnicities and races. Here we report the distribution of high- risk (HR) HPV genotypes in an inner-city hospital that primarily serves an AA population. Methods Genotyping of HR-HPV+ (encompassing 14 genotypes) cervical cytology specimens commenced in October 2018 at our institution. The presence of genotypes 16, and 18/45 (combined) are separately reported; 11 other high-risk genotypes are pooled in cases that were HR-HPV+. The HR-HPV and HPV genotyping assays were performed by the Aptima method (Hologic, Inc.) Distribution of HPV genotypes by the Bethesda diagnostic categories for the period October 2018 to March 31, 2020 was evaluated. Results A total of 13,160 cervical Pap smear cases were screened, and 10,060 cases were tested for HR-HPV. HR- HPV positive rate was 14% (1412/10060), of which 78% were in African Americans (AA), 14% in Hispanics, 4% in Caucasians, and 4% in others. HPV genotyping results were available for 1136 of the HR-HPV + cases. The cytology diagnoses (n) with their corresponding HPV genotyping results and distribution (HPV16, HPV18/45, and other HPVs), respectively, are as follows: NILM (270), 3.7%, 5.9%, and 90.4%; ASCUS (415), 8.2%, 6.8%, and 84.8%; LSIL (247), 8.1%, 13.0%, and 78.1%; ASCH (100), 18.0%, 13.0%, and 67.0%; HSIL (74), 20.3%, 14.9%, and 60.8%; AGC (30), 6.66%, 3.33%, and 90.0%, respectively. Co-infection with both HPV 16 and HPV 18/45 was seen in only 0.7% of all cases (4.0% of HSIL). Conclusion Overall, the HR-HPV positive rate was 14.0%. HPV 16/18/45 positivity accounts for ~18% of all HR-HPV positive cases. HPV 16/18/45 positivity is lowest in Pap-negative cases (9.6%) and highest in cases with HSIL (39.2%). Co-infection with HPV 16 as well as 18/45 is rare. This study highlights that in women of AA descent, it is not HPV genotypes 16/18/45 but other HPV genotypes that are more frequent.

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