Literature DB >> 14674070

Prevalence and typing of HPV DNA in atypical squamous cells in pregnant women.

Danielle W Lu1, Edyta C Pirog, Xiaopei Zhu, Hanlin L Wang, Karen R Pinto.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine the prevalence and typing of HPV DNA in pregnant women with a diagnosis of atypical squamous cells (ASC) and to assess whether pregnancy-related changes contribute to the diagnosis of ASC. STUDY
DESIGN: HPV testing was performed on residual specimens from the ThinPrep Pap test (Cytyc Corp., Boxborough, Massachusetts, U.S.A.) in pregnant women diagnosed as ASC (study group, n = 105), low and high grade squamous intraepithelial lesion (LSIL and HSIL) (positive control, n = 33) and negative for epithelial cell abnormality (negative control, n = 20). All cases were reviewed by 2 cytopathologists to obtain consensus diagnoses using the Bethesda System 2001 criteria. The study group cases were further subcategorized into ASC of undetermined significance (ASCUS, n = 99) and ASC cannot exclude HSIL (ASC-H, n = 6). HPV testing was also performed on an ASC control group consisting of 68 consecutive ASC cases in nonpregnant women, matched by age.
RESULTS: Mean patient age was 23.7 years for the study group and 25.6 years for the ASC control group. HPV DNA was detected in 88.6% of cases in the study group, including 87.9% of ASC-US and 100% of ASC-H cases. Of the HPV positive cases, 79.6%, 4.3%, 5.4% and 10.8% had high-risk, mixed high- and low-risk, low-risk and unknown HPV types, respectively. The most frequent HPV types detected were: types 52 (31.2%), 16 (15.1%), 39 (11.8%), 53 (10.8%), and 18 and 58 (9.7% each). Multiple viral types were detected in 43.0% of cases. The prevalence of HPV DNA in the positive and negative controls in pregnant women was 100% and 55%, respectively. HPV DNA was detected in 83.8% of the ASC control group.
CONCLUSION: Regardless of pregnancy-related changes, the prevalence of HPV DNA in pregnant women (88.6%) was similar to that found in ASC in nonpregnant women of the same reproductive-age group (83.8%), and the high-risk types accounted for the vast majority of cases (83.9%). These findings demonstrate that pregnancy-related changes do not contribute to the diagnosis of ASC in this subset of women. Furthermore, the high HPV DNA prevalence in reproductive-age women (< 40 years) suggests that HPV testing may have limited utility in effective management of these patients.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14674070     DOI: 10.1159/000326637

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Cytol        ISSN: 0001-5547            Impact factor:   2.319


  2 in total

1.  ASC-H in Pap test--definitive categorization of cytomorphological spectrum.

Authors:  Mamatha Chivukula; Vinod B Shidham
Journal:  Cytojournal       Date:  2006-05-10       Impact factor: 2.091

2.  Transplacental transmission of Human Papillomavirus.

Authors:  Renato L Rombaldi; Eduardo P Serafini; Jovana Mandelli; Edineia Zimmermann; Kamille P Losquiavo
Journal:  Virol J       Date:  2008-09-25       Impact factor: 4.099

  2 in total

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