Abstract
Persistent high-risk human papillomavirus (HR-HPV) infections play a major role in the development of invasive cervical cancer (CC), and screening for such infections is in many countries the primary method of detecting and preventing CC. HPV typing can be used for triage and risk stratification of women with atypical squamous cells of undetermined significance (ASC-US)/low-grade cervical lesions (LSIL), though the current clinical practice in Mexico is to diagnose CC or its preceding conditions mainly via histology and HR-HPV detection. Additional information regarding these HPV infections, such as viral load and co-infecting agents, might also be useful for diagnosing, predicting, and evaluating the possible consequences of the infection and of its prevention by vaccination. The goal of this follow-up hospital case study was to determine if HPV types, multiple HPV infections, and viral loads were associated with infection persistence and the cervical lesion grade. A total of 294 cervical cytology samples drawn from patients with gynecological alterations were used in this study. HPV types were identified by real-time PCR DNA analysis. A subset of HPV-positive patients was reevaluated to identify persistent infections. We identified HPV types 16, 18, and 39 as the most prevalent. One hundred five of the patients (59%) were infected with more than one type of HPV. The types of HPV associated with multiple HPV infections were 16, 18, and 39. In the follow-up samples, 38% of patients had not cleared the initially detected HPV infection, and these were considered persistent. We found here an association between multiple HPV infections and high viral loads with and infection persistence. Our findings suggest there are benefits in ascertaining viral load and multiple HPV infections status of HR-HPV infections for predicting the risk of persistence, a requirement for developing CC. These findings contribute to our understanding of HPV epidemiology and may allow screening programs to better assess the cancer-developing risks associated with individual HR-HPV infections.
Highlights
The USA is on track to eliminate cervical cancer (CC) as a public health problem within the two to three decades, similar progress in Latin American countries has been absent [1]
We performed a chi-squared test to analyze the association between high-risk human papillomavirus (HR-HPV) type and multiple found
We found a significant association between most of the HPV types, except HPV 33, 35, a chi-squared test to analyze the association between HR-HPV type and multiple
Summary
The USA is on track to eliminate cervical cancer (CC) as a public health problem within the two to three decades, similar progress in Latin American countries has been absent [1]. In Mexico, in 2008, health institutions of the National Health System incorporated the hybrid capture (HC) test as a screening procedure for HPV detection in women aged to 64 years [20]. Serial type-specific HPV viral load measuring allows differentiation between regressing cervical lesions and serial virion productive transient infections [21]. The risk of CC and HSIL increases with the viral load, which could triage HR-HPV-positive women [23,24]. The goal of this follow-up hospital case study was to determine if HPV types, multiple HPV infections, and viral load in women with gynecological alterations were associated with infection persistence and the cervical lesion grade
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