Literature DB >> 27110088

Human Papillomavirus Infection as a Possible Cause of Spontaneous Abortion and Spontaneous Preterm Delivery.

Lea Maria Margareta Ambühl1, Ulrik Baandrup1, Karen Dybkær2, Jan Blaakær3, Niels Uldbjerg3, Suzette Sørensen1.   

Abstract

Based on the current literature, we aimed to provide an overview on Human Papillomavirus prevalence in normal pregnancies and pregnancies with adverse outcome. We conducted a systematic literature search in PubMed and Embase. Data extracted from the articles and used for analysis included HPV prevalence, pregnancy outcome, geographical location, investigated tissue types, and HPV detection methods. The overall HPV prevalence in normal full-term pregnancies was found to be 17.5% (95% CI; 17.3-17.7) for cervix, 8.3% (95% CI; 7.6-9.1) for placental tissue, 5.7% (95% CI; 5.1-6.3) for amniotic fluid, and 10.9% (95% CI; 10.1-11.7) for umbilical cord blood. Summary estimates for HPV prevalence of spontaneous abortions and spontaneous preterm deliveries, in cervix (spontaneous abortions: 24.5%, and preterm deliveries: 47%, resp.) and placenta (spontaneous abortions: 24.9%, and preterm deliveries: 50%, resp.), were identified to be higher compared to normal full-term pregnancies (P < 0.05 and P < 0.0001). Great variation in HPV prevalence was observed between study populations of different geographical locations. This review demonstrates an association between spontaneous abortion, spontaneous preterm delivery, and the presence of HPV in both the cervix and the placenta. However, a reliable conclusion is difficult to draw due to the limited number of studies conducted on material from pregnancies with adverse outcome and the risk of residual confounding.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27110088      PMCID: PMC4826700          DOI: 10.1155/2016/3086036

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Infect Dis Obstet Gynecol        ISSN: 1064-7449


1. Introduction

Intrauterine infection by bacteria is well established as a pathway leading to spontaneous abortion and spontaneous preterm birth [1, 2]. Other pathways, however, may be equally important including decidual hemorrhage, cervical disorders, genetic components, and environmental exposures like smoking [3]. Much less is known about viral infection and adverse pregnancy outcome. Human Papillomavirus (HPV), which is known as a well-established cause for cervical cancer, does though constitute a candidate. The over 180 known HPV-types are small, double-stranded DNA viruses with a circular genome of nearly 8,000 base pairs. HPV infections are common, but about 90% of all infections can be cleared within less than 2 years by unknown mechanisms [4-6]. HPV-6 and HPV-11 are the most common low-risk types and are found to be causative for genital warts [6]. The cancer associated high-risk types include HPV-16 and HPV-18 [6] and there is growing evidence of HPV infections playing a relevant role in other anogenital and head and neck cancers [7-9]. Worth to mention is also the morbidity of cutaneous HPV lesions, particularly in immunosuppressed people [9]. Pregnancy has previously proven to be a state of mild immunosuppression due to the decrease in the number of natural killer cells [10], possibly making pregnant women more prone to infections with, for example, HPV. Various immunological theories have been discussed to explain the possibility for pregnancy and the survival of the “semiallogeneic” fetus. Theories include immunological privilege in the uterus, antigenic immaturity of the fetus, and maternal immunosuppression during pregnancy [11]. While attempting to explain the immunological basis of normal pregnancy, the argumentation may have implications for the generation of immune responses to pathogens infecting the placenta, as viruses seem to face similar confrontations like the invading trophoblast [11]. Thus, it is not surprising that viruses take up some of the same strategies to avoid immune detection as do trophoblast cells [12]. Also there is some evidence that elevated steroid hormone levels during pregnancy influence the increase of HPV virus replication by interacting with hormone response elements in the viral genome, thereby giving another possible explanation for the higher incidence of HPV infection during pregnancy [13, 14]. In 2014, Liu et al. [15] conducted a systematic review on HPV prevalence in pregnant and nonpregnant women and reported an increased risk of HPV infection in pregnant women, thereby supporting the debate of how far HPV may be involved in adverse pregnancy outcomes. Various authors report an infection with HPV during pregnancy to be associated with the risk of spontaneous abortion, spontaneous preterm delivery, and placental abnormalities [16-21]. HPV DNA has been detected in the cervix [13, 21–23], fetal membranes [24], amniotic fluid [25], umbilical cord blood [26, 27], and the placenta [13, 18, 27–29]. HPV detection rates range however widely from 6 to 65% and the results are controversial [13, 18, 20, 22, 23, 27, 30–32]. It is therefore of great interest to examine how widespread HPV infections are among pregnant women and whether or not there is an association between HPV infection and spontaneous abortion or spontaneous preterm delivery. Moreover, nowadays there exists a successful vaccination to prevent infection and disease caused by infection with HPV-6, HPV-11, HPV-16, and HPV-18. Thus, there might be a chance to minimize the risk for pregnancy complications by applying the same or a modified version of vaccination. Our group studies the impact of placental HPV infection on spontaneous abortion and preterm delivery. In this context the aim of this study is to provide an overview of the existing literature by doing a systematic review on HPV prevalence in pregnancy. We focused on pregnancies with adverse outcome and included a discussion of possible factors influencing or explaining the reported differences in HPV detection rates.

2. Material and Methods

PRISMA and MOOSE guidelines were used where applicable [33].

2.1. Search Strategy

A systematic literature search was conducted in the PubMed and Embase databases and search terms were used as follows: (1) “Human papillomavirus AND pregnancy”; (2) “Human papillomavirus AND preterm delivery”; (3) “Human papillomavirus AND preterm birth”; (4) “Human papillomavirus AND abortion”. The search was restricted to articles in English, on humans and published between January 1995 and October 2014. The search was carried out on October 28, 2014.

2.2. Study Selection

In order to identify relevant articles for whole-paper revision, duplicates were removed and titles and abstracts were screened based on the following exclusion criteria: studies investigating cell lines only, HPV vaccines, or sperm-related aspects, as well as guideline articles, general articles describing public health, and literature reviews. The remaining articles were assigned to subsequent whole-paper revision. These articles were systematically reviewed in accordance with the inclusion and exclusion criteria. The inclusion criteria were set to the following: studies on asymptomatic healthy pregnant women and women experiencing a spontaneous preterm delivery or spontaneous abortion; investigation of HPV infection within cervix, placenta, amniotic fluid, or umbilical cord blood; HPV detection test directly linkable to index pregnancy. Studies restricted to nonpregnant women or HPV positive women only, case reports, follow-up and association studies, and in vitro fertilization studies were excluded. Studies including women with history of HPV-related lesions were not excluded, as this will be the case in any normal study population. There was no restriction for studies of different geographical origins, the time point of sample collection, methods of sample collection, and HPV testing method. Information on the latter was included in Table 1, characteristics of included studies.
Table 1

Characteristics of included studies.

ReferencesCountryInclusion criteriaGestational age at sample collection (weeks)Examined tissue typeSample sizeHPV prevalence%HPV detection method Study quality
Study strengthsPotential biases
[34]KoreaPregnant womenhealthy, ≥18 years of age, sonographically confirmed intrauterine pregnancy1st, 2nd, or 3rd trimester or postpartumCervixTotal: 9601st trimester: 3802nd trimester: 1933rd trimester: 195Postpartum: 192Total: 24.31st trimester: 20.52nd trimester: 34.23rd trimester: 23.1Postpartum: 22.9DNA chipLarge cohort, multivariant logistic regression analysis, separate analysis for trimestersSample collection at different time points, including women with abnormal pap smear

[35]KoreaPDhealthy, <37 weeks of gestation6-week postpartumCervix4515.6HCAMultivariant logistic regression analysisSmall sample size, postpartum sampling only, HCA sensitivity limited to 13 HPV-types

[36]MexicoSA: healthy, curettage up to week 20ND: healthy, attending for delivery at term with viable productsSA: <20ND: before deliveryCervixSA: 139ND: 138SA: 24.4ND: 15.2PCRLarge cohort, risk analysisComparison of SA (first trimester) with ND (at term), HPV-related disease history unclear

[37]KoreaPregnant womenhealthy, singleton, in first trimesterCervix: 1st, 2nd, and 3rd trimester, postpartumPlacenta, umbilical cord blood: at birthCervix, placenta, umbilical cord bloodCervix: 153Placenta: 152Cervix: 24Placenta: 3.3Umbilical cord blood: 1.3DNA chipLarge cohort, longitudinal follow-up, multivariant logistic regression analysisSample collection from cervix at different time points

[38]PolandPregnant womensingleton, normal cervical smear33–41Cervix13516.3PCRLarge cohort, multivariant logistic regression analysis, confirmation by sequencingVaginal and cesarean deliveries included, potential contamination problem (HPV11 present in all positive samples)

[23]KoreaPregnant womenhealthy, over 36 weeks of gestation>36Cervix, placenta, umbilical cord blood469Cervix: 15.4Placenta: 0Umbilical cord blood: 0DNA chipLarge cohort, confirmation by in situ hybridizationVaginal and cesarean deliveries included Umbilical cord blood and placenta were collected from HPV positive mothers

[39]ChinaPregnant womenhealthy, asymptomatic22.5–26.7Cervix313913.4DNA chipLarge cohort, logistic regression analysisVaginal and cesarean deliveries included, women with abnormal cervical cytology included

[40]NetherlandsPregnant womenNA1st, 2nd, and 3rd trimester, postpartumCervix5121.6PCRMatched groups, detection method with high analytical sensitivitySmall sample size, self-sampling, sample collection at different time points

[41]KoreaPregnant womenhealthy, over 36 weeks of gestation>36Cervix29118.9DNA chipLarge cohort, stratified analysis to test for confoundingWomen with abnormal cervical cytology included, vaginal and cesarean deliveries included

[42]FinlandPregnant womenhealthy, in third trimester3rd trimester, at birthCervix, placenta, umbilical cord bloodCervix: 329Placenta: 306Umbilical cord: 311Cervix: 16.4Placenta: 4.2Umbilical cord blood: 3.5PCRLarge cohort, regression analysis, multimetrix assay for HPV detection, pap smear at baseline

[43]PolandSA: healthyND: healthy, delivering at termSA: 6–16ND: at birthAborted products of conception, placentaSA: 51ND: 78SA: 17.7ND: 24.4PCRSmall sample size, comparison of SA with ND, HPV-related disease history unclear

[44]MexicoPregnant womenhealthy, in third trimester, delivering at term3rd trimesterCervix, placenta72Cervix: 75Placenta: 47.2PCRPCR process was blindedPotential contamination problem (HPV18 present in all positive placenta samples), vaginal and cesarean deliveries included

[45]LithuaniaPregnant womenNA1st and 3rd trimesterCervix1st trimester: 2133rd trimester: 1461st trimester: 17.83rd trimester: 10.3PCRLarge cohort, risk analysis, separate analysis for trimestersBig proportion with history of gynecological diseases, exclusion of 67 women due to change of residency/miscarriage/ premature delivery, no inclusion and exclusion criteria, commercial HPV PCR kit

[46]JapanPregnant womenNA1st, 2nd, or 3rd trimester or postpartumCervix15135.8PCRLarge cohort, pap smear at study entrySample collection at different time points, unclear how and when women deliver

[21]USAPD <37 weeks of gestation, available HPV-test resultsNACervix7067.1HCARisk analysis (age, race), data from over 11 yearsSampling method and time point not mentioned, study including African Americans, HCA restricted to 13 HPV-types only

[47]TurkeyPregnant womenNA18–22Cervix1342.2PCRLarge cohort22 with abnormal ultrasound findings, other virus types being in focus, HPV-related disease history unclear, no inclusion and exclusion criteria, outpatient clinic (low socioeconomic group)

[32]BelgiumPregnant womenassigned for abdominal CVS, mainly due to high risk for chromosomal abnormalities 11–13Placenta355.7PCRTransabdominal sampling (no birth canal contamination), highly sensitive detection method, confirmation by sequencingSmall sample size, highly selected group of women, limited amount of placenta material (actual HPV prevalence higher?), HPV-related disease history unclear

[48]USAPregnant womenhealthy, in third trimester, 18 and above3rd trimesterCervix33328PCRLarge cohort, logistic regression analysis, confirmation by sequencingVaginal and cesarean deliveries included, unclear if deliveries are at term, 25% of women with history of HPV-related lesions

[49]BrazilPregnant womenNA 2–37Cervix37135.3HCALarge cohort, multivariant logistic regression analysisInclusion at ambulatories for patients suspected to infectious diseases, no inclusion and exclusion criteria, sample collection at different time points, women with genital warts included

[50]BrazilPregnant womenNANACervix4025PCRSmall sample size, inclusion at outpatient clinic (low socioeconomic group), no inclusion and exclusion criteria, HPV-related disease history unclear, sampling time point not mentioned

[51]SpainPregnant womenunselected29–33Cervix8286.5PCRLarge cohort, multivariant logistic regression analysisGoal to find HPV positive women for prospective cohort study on mother-to-child transmission, HPV-related disease history unclear, no inclusion and exclusion criteria, vaginal and cesarean deliveries

[27]FinlandPregnant womenthird trimester31.6–42.5Placenta, Umbilical cord bloodPlacenta: 306Umbilical cord blood: 311Placenta: 4.2Umbilical cord blood: 3.5PCRLarge cohort, multivariant regression analysis, pap smear at study entry, confirmation by sequencingIncluded women delivering before week 37, part of women showing genital warts or cervical lesions, no HPV status examination before recruitment

[20]USAPD: spontaneous, <37 weeks of gestation ND: delivering at termPD: 21–36ND: 37–42PlacentaPD: 30ND: 30PD: 50ND: 20PCRComparison of PD to ND (best possible control), confirmation by sequencingSmall sample size, study including mostly African Americans, HPV-related disease history unclear, type-specific PCR only

[29]USASA: singleton, in second trimesterIA: singleton, for congenital anomalies or maternal medical indications 16.7–23.6PlacentaSA: 84IA: 16SA: 57IA: 31PCRMultivariable logistic regression analysis, comparison of SA to IA (best possible control), confirmation by sequencingSmall sample size, imbalance between cases and controls, study including African Americans, HPV-related disease history unclear, gestational age of controls being greater

[52]JapanPregnant womenhealthy, unselected1st, 2nd, or 3rd trimesterCervix118312.5PCRLarge cohortHPV-related disease history unclear, sample collection at different time points

[53]USAPregnant womenclinically indicating amniocentesis, intact membranesNAAmniotic fluid1420PCRLarge cohort, transabdominal sampling (no birth canal contamination)HPV-related disease history unclear, sampling time point not mentioned, highly selected group of women, unclear how/when they deliver

[54]MexicoPregnant womenhealthy1st, 2nd, or 3rd trimesterCervix27437.1HCALarge cohort, unconditional/conditional logistic regressionSelf-sampling, HPV-related disease history unclear, sample collection at different time points, HCA restricted to 13 HR-types

[55]ChinaPregnant womenasymptomatic (cervical)1st, 2nd, or 3rd trimesterCervix, amniotic fluid, umbilical cord blood116Cervix: 36.2PCRLarge cohortSample collection at different time points

[13]AustriaPregnant womenhealthy, uncomplicated pregnancy, undergoing cesarean section37.1–40.2Cervix, placenta, amniotic fluid, umbilical cord blood153Cervix: 36.6Placenta: 5.2Amniotic fluid: 0Umbilical cord blood: 0HCA, PCRLarge cohort, univariant/multivariant logistic regression analysisHighly selected group of women, placenta swabs (quality of material)

[56]USAPregnant womenunselected35 and 39Cervix57729PCRLarge cohort, logistic regression analysis, confirmation by sequencing, pap smear at study entryNo inclusion and exclusion criteria, women with history of HPV-related lesions included

[28]CroatiaSAnormal cervix 4–19Placenta1087.4PCRLarge cohort, only women with normal cervix49.1% having a miscarriage before, 35.2% having abnormal karyotype, possible contamination due to curettage, positive results only with HPV16 and 18 specific primers

[57]ChinaPregnant womenunselected, regardless of sexual history or cervical disease1st, 2nd, or 3rd trimesterCervix30810.1PCRLarge cohort, confirmation by sequencing, age-matched controlsSample collection at different time points, inclusion of women regardless of sexual history or cervical diseases

[22]AustriaPregnant womenassigned for CVS or placental biopsy9.6–31.3Cervix, placentaCervix: 179Placenta: 147Cervix: 24.6Placenta: 0HCA, PCRLarge cohort, univariant/multivariant logistic regression analysis, transabdominal sampling (no birth canal contamination)Highly selected group of women, unusual PCR primers (E6), unclear how/when they delivered, analysis of placenta by PCR, cervix by HCA

[58]France, Switzerland, GermanyPregnant womenassigned for amniocentesis due to maternal or fetal abnormalities14–25Amniotic fluid23812PCR, Southern blotLarge cohort, transabdominal sampling (no birth canal contamination), confirmation by Study strengthHighly selected group of women, HPV-related disease history unclear, samples collected in three countries, unclear how/when they deliver

[59]ItalyPregnant womenhealthy, negative pap smear at first trimester36–39Cervix7115.2PCRLarge cohort, pap smear at study entry, no history of HPV-related lesionsSampling method not mentioned, vaginal and cesarean deliveries

[60]GreeceSA<20 weeks of gestation 6–20Aborted product of conception1020PCRLarge cohort11 women have had previous SA, 3 cases with other diseases, GP5/6 primer (low sensitivity?), HPV-related disease history unclear

[61]ChinaPregnant womensingleton36–40Cervix30122.6PCRLarge cohort, confirmation by Study strengthStudy including vaginal and cesarean deliveries, women with abnormal pap smear included, used specific E6 PCR primers only

[62]France, GermanySA: NAIA: for social indicationNAAborted product of conceptionSA: 27IA: 1SA: 70.4IA: 100PCRSmall sample size, HPV-related disease history unclear, sampling time point not mentioned, no inclusion and exclusion criteria, PCR primer with low sensitivity

[63]ItalyPregnant womenhealthy, negative pap smear at entry36–39Cervix7525.4PCRLarge cohort, control for confounders, logistic regression analysis, confirmation by Study strengthSampling method not mentioned

[64]FinlandPregnant womenhealthyAt birthCervix8630.2PCRConfirmation by Study strength and sequencingPossible sampling error, contamination, multiple HPV infection, inclusion of women with signs of cervical HPV infection, vaginal and cesarean deliveries

[18]USASA and IAfirst trimester1st trimesterAborted product of conceptionSA: 25IA: 15SA: 60IA: 20PCRComparison of SA to IA (best possible control), confirmation by dot blot hybridizationSmall sample size, possible contamination from cervix and vagina, HPV-related disease history unclear

[65]USAPregnant womenhealthyNACervix11434.2Southern blotLarge cohort, logistic regression analysisHistory of CIN not used as exclusion criteria, sampling time point not mentioned, study mostly including African Americans and Hispanics, Bronx → low socioeconomic group, Southern Blot (HPV11, 16, 18 only), unclear how/when they deliver

[66]GermanyPregnant womenuncomplicated pregnancies1st, 2nd, and 3rd trimester, postpartumCervix10813.9HCALarge cohort, logistic regression analysis, age-frequency matched controlsSpecimens instead of patients, sample collection at different time points, commercial HPV detection kit (6 HPV-types only)

[67]HungaryPregnant womencytologically and colposcopically healthy1st, 3rd trimester, postpartumCervix3931PCRCytologically and colposcopically healthy womenSmall sample size, 8 deliveries being preterm, HPV-related disease history unclear, sample collection at different time points, outpatient clinic → low socioeconomic group

[68]USAPregnant womenhealthy, in first trimester, ≥18 years of age1st trimesterCervix24531HCALarge cohort, univariant risk analysis/multiple logistic regression analysis, confirmation by Study strengthStudy including African-Americans, HCA sensitivity limited to 14 HPV-types

ND = normal deliveries, PD = preterm deliveries, IA = induced abortion, SA = spontaneous abortion.

2.3. Data Extraction and Statistics

Data, which includes information about the investigated tissue types, country where the study was performed, sample size, sampling time point, HPV prevalence, and HPV detection method, was extracted and analyzed using MatLab (version R2011b). Data from all studies was pooled and women were grouped according to their pregnancy outcome or the pregnancy status at time point of sample collection. An overall HPV prevalence was calculated including 95% confidence interval (CI) in normal pregnancies and in pregnancies with adverse outcome. This was done for various tissue types, geographical origins, time points of sample collection, and HPV detection methods used. Studies from Mexico and Brazil have been grouped into “Latin America.” Statistical significance between two proportions was tested using “Two-sample test of proportions.” All P values were two-sided and P < 0.05 was considered significant.

3. Results

3.1. Study Selection

The initial PubMed database search resulted in the identification of a total of 650 articles (Figure 1). After removal of duplicates and screening of titles and abstracts, the remaining 57 articles were subjected to whole-paper revision (Figure 1). Of these, 42 articles met the final inclusion criteria and were used for data extraction and quantitative analyses (Figure 1). The supplementary search in Embase database was conducted in the same way and three additional articles were included for data extraction and quantitative analysis. The 45 articles included investigated 14 470 pregnant women in total, of which 13 757 underwent normal full-term pregnancies, 145 experienced spontaneous preterm deliveries, 536 experienced spontaneous abortions, and 32 had performed an induced abortion. The study populations were from Europe (n = 4639) [13, 22, 27, 28, 32, 38, 40, 42, 43, 45, 47, 51, 58–60, 62–64, 66, 67], Asia (n = 7116) [23, 34, 35, 37, 39, 41, 46, 52, 55, 57, 61], USA (n = 1681) [18, 20, 21, 29, 48, 53, 56, 65, 68], and Latin America (n = 1034) [36, 44, 49, 50, 54]. Table 1 shows demographic characteristics, key aspects of study design, and study strength and potential biases of all included studies.
Figure 1

Flow diagram of literature search. The flow diagram shows the search in the PubMed database. A supplementary search in the Embase database was conducted in the same way and resulted in three additional articles for data extraction and quantitative analysis.

3.2. HPV Prevalence in Different Tissue Types of Normal Full-Term Pregnancies

HPV prevalence in healthy pregnant women giving birth at term was investigated in 38 of the 45 included studies and provided data on 13 757 pregnant women. HPV prevalence appears to be highly dependent on the tissue type tested (Figure 2). In all studies included, HPV prevalence varied between 2.2% and 75% in cervical tissue, with a summary estimate of 17.5% (95% CI; 17.3–17.7). In placental tissue and abortion products, 8.3% (95% CI; 7.6–9.1) of the analyzed pregnancies were found to be HPV positive and varied between 0% and 47.2%. HPV prevalence in amniotic fluid varied between 0% and 25%, with a summary estimate of 5.7% (95% CI; 5.1–6.3). Finally, umbilical cord blood was calculated to be HPV positive in 10.9% (95% CI; 10.1–11.7) of all cases and varied between 0% and 57.9%. The difference between all proportions was significant (P < 0.05, P < 0.001, and P < 0.0001, resp.).
Figure 2

HPV prevalence depends on the investigated tissue type. HPV prevalence in different tissue types of normal pregnancies in %. 38 studies have been included in the present analysis, N cervix = 32, N placenta/abortion  product = 9, N amniotic  fluid = 4, and N umbilical  cord  blood = 7. N indicates number of studies included. n indicates number of cases included. P < 0.05, P < 0.001, and P < 0.0001.

3.3. HPV Prevalence in Pregnancies with Adverse Outcome and Comparison to Normal Pregnancies

HPV prevalence in pregnancies with adverse outcome, including spontaneous abortion and spontaneous preterm delivery, was investigated in 10 of the 45 included studies and provided data on 681 pregnancies. Three studies were investigating cervical HPV infection and seven studies looking at HPV prevalence in placental tissue. Details are given in Table 2. Only one study analyzed HPV prevalence in cervical tissue of spontaneous abortions and found 24.5% of all cervical samples to be HPV positive (Table 2). Placental HPV prevalence in spontaneous abortions varied between 0% and 70.4%, with a summary estimate of 24.9% (95% CI; 22.4–27.5) (Table 2). HPV prevalence in spontaneous preterm deliveries was found to be 47% (95% CI; 42.3–51.6) in cervix, with a variation between 15.6% and 67.1% (Table 2). Placental tissue of spontaneous preterm deliveries was only investigated in one study where a HPV prevalence of 50% was observed (Table 2). The overall HPV prevalence in cervical tissue of normal pregnancies was found to be 17.5% (95% CI; 17.3–17.7) (Figure 2). This is significantly lower than in spontaneous preterm deliveries (47%, P < 0.0001) and spontaneous abortions (24.5%, P < 0.05) (Figure 3). An even bigger contrasting picture is seen in placental tissue. Here normal pregnancies are found to be HPV positive in 8.3% (95% CI; 7.6–9.1) of all cases (Figure 2), whereas placental tissues of spontaneous preterm deliveries and spontaneous abortions are found to be positive in 50% (P < 0.0001) and 24.9% (P < 0.0001) of cases, respectively (Figure 3).
Figure 3

Higher HPV prevalence detected in pregnancies with adverse outcome compared to normal pregnancies. HPV prevalence in normal pregnancies, spontaneous abortions, and spontaneous preterm deliveries in %. (a) In cervix. 34 studies have been included in the present analysis, N Normal = 32, N Spontaneous  abortion = 1, and N Preterm  delivery = 2. (b) In placenta. 14 studies have been included in the present analysis, N Normal = 9, N Spontaneous  abortion = 6, and N Preterm  delivery = 1. N indicated number of studies included. n indicates number of cases included. P < 0.05, P < 0.01, and P < 0.0001.

3.4. HPV Prevalence in Normal Pregnancies Depends on Geographical Location

Information on geographical distribution of the investigated studies was collected to see if ethnicity might be a contributing factor to the great variation in HPV prevalence observed. The goal of the investigation was to determine whether women from different countries may be differentially exposed to HPV and some may thereby have a higher risk for possible HPV-induced pregnancy deficiencies. Figure 4 shows the geographical distribution of HPV prevalence in cervical specimens from women with normal full-term pregnancies. Here it is clear that pregnant women from USA and Latin America have a significantly higher (P < 0.0001) HPV prevalence compared to European and Asian women (Figure 4). Latin America is represented by Mexico and Brazil and the summary estimate for HPV prevalence was 35.5% (95% CI; 34.6–36.5). HPV prevalence found in the included studies varied between 15.2% and 75%. The analysis of the population from USA found a HPV prevalence of 29.6% (95% CI; 29.5–29.7). Here a variation of 28% to 34.2% has been reported. The Asian population is represented by China, Japan, and Korea. The cervical HPV prevalence in Asia varied between 10.1% and 36.2%, with a summary estimate of 16.4% (95% CI; 16.3–16.6). The European population is represented by Spain, France, Italy, Germany, Belgium, Netherlands, Finland, Switzerland, Austria, Hungary, Greece, Croatia, Turkey, Poland, and Lithuania and the HPV prevalence varied between 2.2% and 36.6%, with a summary estimate of 11% (95% CI; 10.7–11.3). The difference between all proportions was highly significant (P < 0.01 and P < 0.0001, resp.), meaning that HPV prevalence in pregnant women is dependent on geographical or ethnical parameters, with pregnant women from USA and Latin America having the highest HPV prevalence reported. The same tendency can be observed in placenta, amniotic fluid, and umbilical cord blood, but numbers were insufficient for proper analyses.
Figure 4

HPV prevalence in normal pregnancies depends on geographical location. HPV prevalence in cervix of normal pregnancies in %. 32 studies have been included in the present analysis, N Europe = 13, N USA = 4, N Latin  America = 5, and N Asia = 10. N indicated number of studies included. n indicates number of cases included. P < 0.01, P < 0.0001.

Variation of HPV prevalence between studies conducted on different continents can also be observed in studies investigating pregnancies with adverse outcome (Table 2), but a proper analysis is difficult due to the small number of studies. However, it can be stated that studies from USA consistently report a significantly higher HPV prevalence in spontaneous abortions and spontaneous preterm deliveries compared to normal pregnancies, in both cervical and placental tissue [18, 20, 21, 29]. European studies vary a lot in their HPV prevalence found in placenta, which makes it difficult to estimate the risk of a HPV infection for European pregnant women. There are no studies conducted on cervical specimens of spontaneous abortions or spontaneous preterm deliveries in Europe. Asian and Latin American studies are also limited [35, 36] and a conclusion of the risk of HPV infection for pregnant women is not possible. It can though be speculated whether the relatively high HPV prevalence found in the Latin American population of normal pregnancies (Figure 4) may influence the pregnancy outcome in those countries.

3.5. Influence of the Time Point of Sample Collection and the HPV Detection Method on HPV Prevalence

There are multiple factors that may influence HPV prevalence. For the present analysis, data on the time point of sample collection and the HPV detection methods used were collected. Figure 5(a) shows cervical HPV prevalence in relation to the time point of sample collection. Samples from the first trimester of pregnancy were found to be HPV positive in 23.9% (95% CI; 23.4–24.4) of all cases and showed a variation between 1.1% and 41.2%. Samples taken at birth were tested positive in 21.7% (95% CI; 21.3–22.2) of all cases. Here HPV prevalence varied between 12.6% and 30.2%. The second and third trimester as well as postpartum samples showed a HPV prevalence of 16.7% (95% CI; 16.5–17.0), 15.2% (95% CI; 14.9–15.6), and 17.3% (95% CI; 16.7–17.9). HPV prevalence varied between 2.2% and 40%, 5.2% and 75%, and 6.2% and 27%. The difference between proportions was significant (P < 0.05, P < 0.01, P < 0.001, and P < 0.0001 resp.). Not significant was the difference between the proportions for the first trimester and at birth samples (P = 0.12), the second trimester and the third trimester, respectively, and the postpartum period (P = 0.07 and P = 0.39), and the third trimester and the postpartum period (P = 0.14).
Figure 5

HPV prevalence depends on time of sample collection and on the applied HPV detection method. (a) Cervical HPV prevalence in % at different time points of sample collection of normal pregnancies. 25 studies have been included in the present analysis, N 1st  trimester = 10, N 2nd  trimester = 10, N 3rd  trimester = 18, N at  birth = 4, and N postpartum = 4. (b) HPV prevalence in % in relation to the detection method used. Note that only two studies were using Southern blot as their main detection method. 45 studies have been included in the present analysis, N PCR = 34, N hybrid  capture = 8, N DNA  chip = 5, and N Southern  blot = 2. N indicated number of studies included. n indicates number of cases included. P < 0.05, P < 0.01, P < 0.001, and P < 0.0001; ns: not significant.

Also the HPV detection methods used may influence the found HPV prevalence. Figure 5(b) shows the analysis of HPV prevalence according to the HPV detection method used. Hybrid capture assay identified HPV in 26.4% (95% CI; 25.6–27.2) of all analyzed samples. The HPV prevalence found varied between 0% and 67.1%. The summary estimate for HPV prevalence by PCR was calculated to be 15.5% (95% CI; 15.3–15.8) and varied between studies from 0% to 100%. HPV prevalence identified by DNA chip varied between 0% and 24.3%, with a summary estimate of 15.1% (95% CI; 15.0–15.3). Southern blotting was only used in two studies and a HPV prevalence of 19.9% (95% CI; 18.7–21.0) has been found. HPV positivity varied between studies from 12% to 34.2%. The difference between all but one of the proportions was significant (P < 0.05, P < 0.01, and P < 0.0001, resp.). Not significant was the difference between proportions for PCR and DNA chip (P = 0.25). The HPV detection method used most widely was PCR with n = 9674 followed by DNA chip with n = 5461.

4. Discussion

In this quantitative analysis on the prevalence of HPV infection in normal pregnancies and pregnancies with adverse outcome, 45 studies were included and data on 14 470 pregnant women were analyzed and summarized. HPV prevalence in normal pregnancies was found to vary between tissue types and study populations of different geographical locations. The highest HPV prevalence could be reported in cervix (17.5%; 95% CI; 17.3–17.7) and in the population from Latin America (35.5% (95% CI; 34.6–36.5)) and USA (29.6% (95% CI; 29.5–29.7)). In comparison to HPV prevalence found in normal pregnancies, spontaneous abortions and spontaneous preterm deliveries were found to have higher HPV positive detection rates (P < 0.05 and P < 0.0001), in both placenta (spontaneous abortions: 24.9%, and preterm deliveries: 50% versus 8.3%, resp.) and cervix (spontaneous abortions: 24.5%, and preterm deliveries: 47% versus 17.5%, resp.). Beyond the geographical location, the time point of sample collection in pregnancy as well as the HPV detection methods used may influence the results on HPV prevalence. The present work has some weaknesses. First, heterogeneity between studies is a problem. Due to the limited number of studies conducted within the field of HPV infections and adverse pregnancy outcomes, inclusion criteria were set relatively widely. This results in a higher number of pregnancies to analyze but possibly more heterogeneous study groups and thereby inflict restricted options to compare directly between studies. The possibility of forming totally homogenous study groups is limited by the study quality and information given, and data on patient-level is missing in most, if not all, of the included studies, which makes controlling for all potential biases difficult. Table 1 contains potential biases and study strength for every single study. Potential biases may include some of the following: unclear inclusion and exclusion criteria for participating women, missing information on ethnicity/method of sample collection/time point of sample collection/mode of delivery, study on highly selected group of women (cesarean sections, amniocentesis, and CVS) or group from low socioeconomically regions, and so forth. The interconnection between HPV infection and pregnancy outcome is complex and will therefore most probably not be explainable by a single parameter analyzed in the present work. The analyses done can however point towards a possible explanation by pregnancy outcome, geographical location, or HPV detection method. Second, studies vary in their inclusion of women with histories of HPV-related diseases. Approximately one-third excludes women with HPV-related lesions, whereas one-third does not exclude but report it and in the last third of studies this information is missing. Genital warts and cervical lesions are known to be HPV-related and a higher percentage of HPV infection would be expected. Third, studies of adverse pregnancies were few. The actual HPV prevalence may therefore be higher or lower than the ones reported in this paper. On the other hand, the present quantitative analysis includes over 14 000 pregnancies and covers many different factors possibly influencing HPV prevalence, thereby providing a broad overview. Fourth, only studies published in English were included, which might limit the results. However, English is the primary common scientific language and the selection criterion “publications in English” is therefore considered to be acceptable. HPV prevalence in pregnant women has been reported to be higher compared to nonpregnant women [54, 68, 69]. Our analysis of normal pregnancies, including 38 studies from 19 different countries on four continents, yields an overall HPV prevalence in the cervix for pregnant women of 17.5% (95% CI: 17.3–17.7). A worldwide meta-analysis by de Sanjosé et al. from 2007 reported a prevalence of cervical HPV infections in nonpregnant women with normal cytology of 10.4% [70]. The difference between the proportions is noticeable and it can therefore be speculated if a higher HPV prevalence in pregnant women can lead to various pregnancy complications. Pregnancy has previously been described as a state of immune suppression, facilitating the survival of the “semiallogeneic” fetus [52]. The inhibition of the host immune response may simultaneously increase the susceptibility to HPV and make it more difficult to clear HPV infections [54, 69, 71–74]. Higher incidences of HPV infection during pregnancy may though possibly be explained by the presence of hormone response elements in the HPV gene that could be triggered through high steroid levels [13, 14]. An infection with HPV during pregnancy has been associated with risk for spontaneous abortion and spontaneous preterm delivery as well as placental abnormalities [16-21]. Our analysis of 10 studies investigating HPV infection in pregnancies with adverse outcome found HPV prevalence in cervix and placenta to be higher than in normal full-term pregnancies, supporting the hypothesis of HPV infection being a risk for pregnancy outcome. Typically the placenta is a relatively effective barrier guarding against many microbes [75, 76] and the fetus in utero is therefore well protected. Nevertheless, multiple studies indicate that viral infection can impair trophoblast function, potentially contributing to pregnancy loss or abnormal implantation [76, 77]. Furthermore, upper genital tract infection was found to be an important cause of preterm birth [78]. As previously mentioned, the wide range of HPV prevalence found is related to several factors including study design, geographic and demographic characteristics, choice of detection method, and risk factor profiles, such as maternal age, gestational age, and history of cesarean section [31, 35, 70, 79]. The present work underlines the importance to consider geographical and demographic variances. The HPV prevalence around the world was found to differ significantly (11–35.5%) with Latin America having the highest cervical HPV prevalence in pregnant women. This is well in line with the previous literature where Latin America and Africa are reported as the geographical areas with the highest cervix cancer rate in the world [8]. North American studies do in general report a relatively high HPV prevalence [20, 48, 56, 65, 68] and our analysis found a HPV prevalence of 29.6% (95% CI; 29.5–29.7) for USA. This may be a bit puzzling since the population in North America due to historical reasons is expected to resemble the population in Europe. It can therefore be speculated that studies conducted in North America include a distinct number of the Latin American and African American population as has been stated by Gomez et al. in 2008 [20]. Unfortunately information of ethnicity of participating women is not available for many of the included studies, providing a potential bias to the results presented on geographical origin. The time point of sample collection during pregnancy is thought to have an influence on HPV prevalence as differences in HPV prevalence regarding the trimester tested have been published [80-83]. Our analysis involved over 13 000 samples and summarized many of the studies investigating the topic. Hereby the first trimester was found to have the highest overall HPV prevalence, closely followed by the samples taken at birth. Analyzed samples collected in the second and third trimester as well as in the postpartum period showed lower HPV prevalence. This is contradictory to studies reporting highest HPV prevalence during the second [34] and third [54, 65, 68] trimester. On the other hand, multiple HPV infections were observed in the first trimester by Yamasaki et al. in 2011 and high-risk HPV-types were found to be selectively increased in the first trimester as well [46, 68]. It is however important to keep in mind that all those time points in reality are time intervals, thereby making a comparison very difficult. To reduce potential bias due to uncertainty about the time point of sample collection, we have chosen to include only studies providing information on the time point of sample collection. This is the case for 25 of the 45 included studies. Finally, we compared HPV prevalence with respect to choice of HPV detection methods, since studies have shown that HPV DNA detectable and the HPV-genotypes identified largely depend on this [42]. Our analysis of HPV prevalence in regard to the applied detection methods revealed hybrid capture assay as the method detecting most HPV positive cases (Figure 5(b)). PCR is thought to be the most sensitive method, detecting less than 10 copies of HPV DNA [46, 84, 85]. In our analysis the HPV prevalence detected by PCR was found to be 15.5% (95% CI; 15.3–15.8). Currently an increasing number of studies use broad spectrum primers [26, 31, 56] instead of type-specific primers. These are designed to detect various HPV-types at the same time, hereby giving a broader picture of the HPV-types present. The downside of high sensitivities allowed by PCR is the risk of false-positives due to contamination [84]. It is therefore crucial to evaluate tissue samples on different molecular levels, confirming the detected virus to be correctly localized and active, thus being able to explain the causality of adverse pregnancy outcome or diseases in general. Functional studies investigating HPV infection in relation to pregnancy are limited. Following the detection of HPV in placental tissue [17, 18, 62] most research is focused on the study of HPV infections in trophoblast cell lines. Being one of the most critical tissues of the placenta, the trophoblast layer plays an important role in contacting maternal tissues and serves multiple roles during gestation. Several lines of evidence point towards the trophoblasts as being the target cells of placental HPV infection. First, it was shown that HPV is able to undergo a complete life cycle in trophoblast cell lines [86, 87]. Second, trophoblast morphology and behavior during HPV infection have been investigated, reporting a higher rate of apoptosis and lower invasion capabilities, agreeing with possible placental dysfunction and adverse pregnancy outcome [20]. Third, studies analyzing trophoblast cells transfected with the HPV genes E5, E6, and E7 report effects on trophoblastic adhesion and increased migratory and invasive properties and may eventually explain potential abnormal implantation due to inappropriate trophoblast spreading [88]. However, a convincing role for HPV infection in connection with spontaneous abortion and spontaneous preterm delivery, at the molecular level, has still to be demonstrated.

5. Conclusion

Based on the present quantitative analyses it can be concluded that HPV prevalence is higher in pregnancies with adverse outcome, such as spontaneous abortion or spontaneous preterm delivery, compared to women experiencing a normal full-term pregnancy. HPV infection may therefore be constituted as a risk for the present pregnancy. HPV prevalence has been shown to be dependent on the tissue type tested and the geographical location of the study population analyzed. However, the number of studies investigating HPV infection on material from spontaneous abortions and spontaneous preterm deliveries is very limited and study groups are heterogeneous which makes a reliable conclusion difficult. It can be stated that study design is important, the selection of proper controls is essential, and, for a valuable comparison between studies, similarity in samples/patients needs to be controlled as strictly as possible. Furthermore, one should keep in mind that the simple detection of a virus never is equal to a real causative role in the adverse outcome of a pregnancy or diseases in general. It is therefore inevitable to study the viral activity and cellular localization to be able to conclude on the impact for a given situation. Therefore we recommend including an investigation of the molecular mechanism of HPV infections in material of pregnancies with adverse outcome and inviting researchers to conduct new studies to clarify HPV's impact on spontaneous abortion and spontaneous preterm delivery. As a consequence of the aforementioned limitations our study group has initiated a prospective study addressing the complexity of HPV in pregnancy.

(a) HPV prevalence in spontaneous abortion

HPV positive cases/all cases (%)Geographical originHPV detection methodReferences
CervixPlacenta
n HPV positive cases% n HPV positive cases%
Spontaneous abortion844857.1USAPCRSrinivas et al. 2006 [29]
1393424.5Latin AmericaPCRConde-Ferráez et al. 2013 [36]
51917.7EuropePCR Skoczyński et al. 2011 [43]
10886.5EuropePCRMatovina et al. 2004 [28]
10200EuropePCR Sifakis et al. 1998 [60]
271970.4EuropePCRMalhomme et al. 1997 [62]
251560.0USAPCR Hermonat et al. 1997 [18]

Total 139 34 24.5 397 99 24.9

(b) HPV prevalence in spontaneous preterm delivery

HPV positive cases/all cases (%)Geographical originHPV detection methodReferences
CervixPlacenta
n HPV positive cases% n HPV positive cases%
Spontaneous preterm delivery45715.6AsiaHybrid capture assayCho et al. 2013 [35]
301550.0USAPCRGomez et al. 2008 [20]
704767.1USAHybrid capture assayZuo et al. 2011 [21]

Total 115 54 47.0 30 15 50.0
  86 in total

1.  Evidence for infection of the human embryo with adeno-associated virus in pregnancy.

Authors:  T Burguete; M Rabreau; M Fontanges-Darriet; E Roset; H D Hager; A Köppel; P Bischof; J R Schlehofer
Journal:  Hum Reprod       Date:  1999-09       Impact factor: 6.918

2.  High-risk human papillomavirus detection and related risk factors among pregnant and nonpregnant women in Mexico.

Authors:  Carlos Hernández-Girón; Jennifer S Smith; Attila Lorincz; Eduardo Lazcano; Mauricio Hernández-Avila; Jorge Salmerón
Journal:  Sex Transm Dis       Date:  2005-10       Impact factor: 2.830

3.  Presence of HPV DNA in placenta and cervix of pregnant Mexican women.

Authors:  Oscar Uribarren-Berrueta; José Sánchez-Corona; Héctor Montoya-Fuentes; Benjamin Trujillo-Hernández; Clemente Vásquez
Journal:  Arch Gynecol Obstet       Date:  2011-05-03       Impact factor: 2.344

4.  Detection of human papillomavirus deoxyribonucleic acid sequences in amniotic fluid during different periods of pregnancy.

Authors:  E Armbruster-Moraes; L M Ioshimoto; E Leao; M Zugaib
Journal:  Am J Obstet Gynecol       Date:  1993-10       Impact factor: 8.661

5.  Exposure of an infant to cervical human papillomavirus infection of the mother is common.

Authors:  M H Puranen; M H Yliskoski; S V Saarikoski; K J Syrjänen; S M Syrjänen
Journal:  Am J Obstet Gynecol       Date:  1997-05       Impact factor: 8.661

6.  Human genital tissues containing DNA of adeno-associated virus lack DNA sequences of the helper viruses adenovirus, herpes simplex virus or cytomegalovirus but frequently contain human papillomavirus DNA.

Authors:  O Malhomme; N Dutheil; M Rabreau; E Armbruster-Moraes; J R Schlehofer; T Dupressoir
Journal:  J Gen Virol       Date:  1997-08       Impact factor: 3.891

7.  Human papillomavirus type 18 DNA in gestational trophoblastic tissues and choriocarcinomas.

Authors:  C C Pao; J J Hor; C J Wu; Y F Shi; X Xie; S M Lu
Journal:  Int J Cancer       Date:  1995-11-15       Impact factor: 7.396

8.  Risk factors of the vertical transmission of human papilloma virus in newborns from singleton pregnancy - preliminary report.

Authors:  Mariusz Skoczyński; Anna Goździcka-Józefiak; Anna Kwaśniewska
Journal:  J Matern Fetal Neonatal Med       Date:  2013-06-21

9.  High-risk human papillomavirus infection is associated with premature rupture of membranes.

Authors:  GeumJoon Cho; Kyung-Jin Min; Hye-Ri Hong; SuhngWook Kim; Jin-Hwa Hong; Jae-Kwan Lee; Min-Jeong Oh; HaiJoong Kim
Journal:  BMC Pregnancy Childbirth       Date:  2013-09-06       Impact factor: 3.007

10.  Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses: the PRISMA statement.

Authors:  David Moher; Alessandro Liberati; Jennifer Tetzlaff; Douglas G Altman
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2009-07-21
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1.  Association Between Maternal Human Papillomavirus Infection and Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

Authors:  Joseph Niyibizi; Nadège Zanré; Marie-Hélène Mayrand; Helen Trottier
Journal:  J Infect Dis       Date:  2020-06-11       Impact factor: 5.226

2.  Maternal condyloma acuminata infection in pregnancy and offspring long-term respiratory and infectious outcome.

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Journal:  Arch Gynecol Obstet       Date:  2022-06-01       Impact factor: 2.344

Review 3.  Uterine Septum with or without Hysteroscopic Metroplasty: Impact on Fertility and Obstetrical Outcomes-A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Observational Research.

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4.  Is cancer a severe delayed hypersensitivity reaction and histamine a blueprint?

Authors:  Mahin Khatami
Journal:  Clin Transl Med       Date:  2016-08-23

5.  Immunological Tolerance, Pregnancy, and Preeclampsia: The Roles of Semen Microbes and the Father.

Authors:  Louise C Kenny; Douglas B Kell
Journal:  Front Med (Lausanne)       Date:  2018-01-04

Review 6.  Human Papillomavirus (HPV) virion induced cancer and subfertility, two sides of the same coin.

Authors:  C E Depuydt; J Beert; E Bosmans; G Salembier
Journal:  Facts Views Vis Obgyn       Date:  2016-12

7.  Cervical human papillomavirus infection in women with preterm prelabor rupture of membranes.

Authors:  Helena Hornychova; Marian Kacerovsky; Ivana Musilova; Lenka Pliskova; Helena Zemlickova; Adela Matejkova; Hana Vosmikova; Katerina Rozkosova; Petra Cermakova; Radka Bolehovska; Petr Halada; Bo Jacobsson; Jan Laco
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-11-21       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 8.  Prediction of Preterm Birth: Maternal Characteristics, Ultrasound Markers, and Biomarkers: An Updated Overview.

Authors:  Zeynep Asli Oskovi Kaplan; A Seval Ozgu-Erdinc
Journal:  J Pregnancy       Date:  2018-10-10

9.  Human Papillomavirus Prophylactic Vaccination improves reproductive outcome in infertile patients with HPV semen infection: a retrospective study.

Authors:  Andrea Garolla; Luca De Toni; Alberto Bottacin; Umberto Valente; Maurizio De Rocco Ponce; Andrea Di Nisio; Carlo Foresta
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-01-17       Impact factor: 4.379

10.  HPV16 E6 and E7 Upregulate Interferon-Induced Antiviral Response Genes ISG15 and IFIT1 in Human Trophoblast Cells.

Authors:  Lea M M Ambühl; Annemarie B Villadsen; Ulrik Baandrup; Karen Dybkær; Suzette Sørensen
Journal:  Pathogens       Date:  2017-09-03
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