| Literature DB >> 30868650 |
Malihe Hasanzadeh1, Marzieh Rejali1,2, Mehraneh Mehramiz2, Mahdieh Akbari2, Leila Mousavi Seresht2, Yasaman Yazdandoost2, Saba Farokhi2, Zahra Mahdian2, Faezeh Maleki2, Zohreh Emamdadi-Aliabad2, Narjes Jalilvand2, Shadi Khorrami2, Zahra Fadaei2, Mehraneh Movahedi2, Zeinab Hosseini2, Fatemeh Razmi2, Toktame Takamoli2, Gordon A Ferns3, Amir Avan2.
Abstract
Cervical cancer is among the most common type of cancers in women and is associated with human papillomavirus (HPV) infection. Genital warts are also reported to be linked with HPV infection types 11 and 6. In turn, clinical characteristics and morphological features of warts may be useful in the prediction of prognosis and in making treatment decisions. Thus, we have investigated the association of high and low-risk HPVs genotype with genital wart risk, as well as pathological and cytological information in cases recruited from a population-based cohort study of 1380 patients. Patients infected with HPV genotype 6 or 11 had an increased risk of having warts, with OR of 2.34 (95% CI: 0.955-5.737, P = 0.06). Also, this association was enhanced in the presence of high plus low-risk HPV for having genital wart (OR: 2.814; 95%: 1.208-6.55, P = 0.017) and cases having high-risk HPV (OR: 2.329; 95% CI: 1.029-5.269, P = 0.042). Moreover, we observed patients with genital warts having CIN2/3, indicating the importance of informing the physician to the patient to prevent more severe lesions. Our data demonstrated that patients with both low/high-risk HPV types had an increased risk of developing genital warts and persistent infection with HPV was a necessary precursor for the increase in cervical lesions.Entities:
Keywords: HPV; cervical cancer; genital warts; vaccination
Year: 2019 PMID: 30868650 DOI: 10.1002/jcb.28557
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Biochem ISSN: 0730-2312 Impact factor: 4.429