Abstract

BackgroundThe knowledge on type specificity and factors that increase or decrease the risk of incident HPV-infections is important to better understand the dynamics of HPV-infections.MethodsA series of 329 pregnant women were enrolled in Finnish Family HPV Study at 3rd trimester of pregnancy and followed-up for 6 years, during which 203 baseline HPV-negative women acquired incident HPV infection. Incidence times and incidence rates (IR) were calculated for 24 low-and high-risk HPV-types detected by Multiplex-HPV-genotyping at each visit. Poison regression was used to estimate predictors of incident HPV infections of species 7 and 9 HPV-genotypes.ResultsHPV16 was the most frequent (47.8%) incident genotype followed by multiple-type infections (25.1%), and single infection with HPV18, 70, 6 and 45. Actuarial mean times to incident event were longest for HPV31 (34.5 months) and HPV45 (32.8 months), while crude mean times were longest for HPV56 (42.4 months) and HPV16 (23.1 months). Actuarial IR was highest for HPV16 and multiple-type infections. Independent protective factors against incident infections were 1) > 2 life-time sexual partners (p = 0.014), 2) later initiation of oral contraceptives (age > 20 years) (p = 0.017) and 3) pregnancy at FU visit (p = 0.0001).ConclusionsAmong newly delivered mothers, higher number of life-time sexual partners, initiation of OC use after age 20 and becoming pregnant during FU decreased the risk for incident species 7/9 HPV infections.

Highlights

  • The knowledge on type specificity and factors that increase or decrease the risk of incident HPVinfections is important to better understand the dynamics of Human papillomavirus (HPV)-infections

  • The present study focused on those 203 baseline-negative women who developed an incident HPV-infection during the FU (= women who were HPV-negative at baseline and acquired incident HPV infection during the FU)

  • HPV16 and HPV18 were detected in 70.6% (n = 36) and 27.2% (n = 14) of the multiple-type infections, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

The knowledge on type specificity and factors that increase or decrease the risk of incident HPVinfections is important to better understand the dynamics of HPV-infections. Human papillomavirus (HPV)-types that infect the female genital tract belong to the alpha-papillomavirus-genus which includes 15 species and 58 HPV-genotypes. The knowledge on type specificity and factors that increase or decrease the risk of incident HPV-infections is important to better understand the dynamics of HPV-infections and to take appropriate measures for their optimal prevention. The aim of this study was to assess the frequency of type-specific incident HPV-infections in addition to actuarial and crude incidence-times and -rates of the most common LR- and HR-HPV- genotypes in newly delivered mothers, prospectively followed-up for 6 years in the Finnish Family HPV Study.

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