Human papillomavirus (HPV) is the most
prevalent sexually transmitted infection in the world, occurring at some
point in up to 75% of sexually active women (Groopman 1999). Although HPV
infection is widespread, few people even know they are infected because
they seldom have noticeable symptoms. For example, males with virus
infecting the cells of the urethra rarely have a discharge or visible
lesions on the penis. Even less well known is that nearly all cervical
cancers (99.7%) are directly linked to previous infection with one or more
of the oncogenic (cancer-inducing) types of HPV (Judson 1992; Walboomers
et al 1999). While women, and men as well, usually are infected shortly
after they become sexually active in their teens, 20s or 30s, progression
to cervical cancer generally takes place over a period of 10 to 20 years.
Unfortunately, some early lesions can become cancerous over a shorter time
interval—within a year or two.
It is estimated that for every 1 million
women infected, 10% (about 100,000) will develop precancerous changes in
their cervical tissue (dysplasia). Of these, about 8% (8,000 women) will
develop early cancer limited to the outer layers of the cervical cells
(carcinoma in situ [CIS]) and roughly 1,600 will develop invasive cancer
unless the precancerous lesions and CIS are detected and treated. In
addition to cervical disease, there is increasing evidence that people
with HPV who engage in anal intercourse may be at high risk for
precancerous anal lesions as well as squamous cell cancer. For example,
among homosexual men, about 60% of those who are seronegative for HIV
carry the HPV virus, while nearly 95% of seropositive men have HPV
(Moscicke et al 1999). Moreover, they have been found to carry the same
types of genital papilloma viruses (e.g., types 16 and 18) that cause
cervical cancer. Finally, women with active infection can transfer the
virus to their newborn (vertical transmission) during delivery, which can
result in papilloma virus infection in the neonate and possible subsequent
laryngeal papillomatosis (Cason,
Rice and Best 1998).
Currently there is no treatment for HPV
infection; therefore, once infected a person is most likely infected for
life. In most cases an active infection is controlled by the immune system
and with time becomes dormant; however, it is not possible to predict
whether or when the virus will become active again. For example, one
recent study followed more than 600 female university students who were
tested every 6 months (Groopman 1999). Over the course of 3 years, new HPV
infections occurred in more than 40% of the women. Most infections lasted
about 8 months and then subsided. After 2 years, however, about 10% of the
women still carried active virus in the vagina and cervix. In this study
the persistent infections were most commonly with the virulent,
cancer-linked types.
Papilloma viruses were first recognized
many years ago as the cause of warts on the hands and feet or condyloma
accuminata on the pubic area (penis and urethra in males or vulva and
vagina in females). For years, warts were considered mainly a nuisance or
ugly, rather than a forerunner of cancer. Indeed warts on fingers and toes
usually are not dangerous, but virus types that target the face can make
skin cancer more likely. Still others that grow largely in the mouth,
producing pea-sized lumps, can develop into fatal squamous cell cancers
(Terai et al 1999).
The papilloma virus is relatively
small—just two strands of DNA contained in a round shell, or envelope,
that looks like a golf ball when enlarged under an electron microscope (Figure
1).
Figure 1. Electron Photomicrograph of
Human Papillomavirus
Source: Stannard/Photo Researchers 1998.
Because HPV cannot be cultured and a
reliable serologic test was not available until recently, it has been
difficult to collect accurate information about the incidence and course
of HPV infections. For example, prior to the 1990s the only way cervical
infection with HPV could be detected was by examining cells from Pap
smears microscopically or by looking at the cervix through a colposcope (a
special instrument that magnifies the cervix so that abnormal changes can
be seen more easily). Now, using DNA testing, which is available on a
research basis, nearly a hundred types of papilloma virus have been
identified. It is still not known, however, why certain HPV types target
skin on the hands or feet while others attack the lining cells of the
mouth, and still others the genitalia of both males and females (Terai et
al 1999).
A link between HPV infections and cervical
cancers was first demonstrated in the early 1980s. DNA testing has
identified nearly 20 papilloma types that primarily infect the cervix,
vulva and vagina in women; the penis in men; and the urethra and anus in
both sexes. Of these, only four are most often found within cervical
cancer cells, with type 16 accounting for about half the cases in the
United States and Europe. In Latin America, by contrast, types 39 and 59
are the most prevalent types, while in West Africa, type 45 is common
(Groopman 1999; Stewart et al 1996). And, as mentioned previously, HPV is
present in virtually all cases of cervical cancer (Walboomers et al 1999).
Cervical cancer is probably one of the
best known examples of how infection with a virus can lead to cancer. In
humans and animals, cell division is regulated largely by two
proteins—one called Rb and the other p53. Recently it has been found
that two genes in HPV, the so-called E6 and E7 genes, produce proteins
that can attach themselves to Rb and p53 and block their effect on
regulating cell division (Massimi and Banks 1997). When this happens, the
infected cells reproduce without any control. While the virus serves only
as the initiating event, over time some of the wildly growing cells
develop permanent changes in their genetic structure that cannot be
repaired. Once this happens, some may eventually turn into cancer cells.
In the early stages, virus-infected
cervical cells may show only small changes in size and shape when examined
microscopically. With time, however, not only do the cells expand and
become more distorted, but their neat arrangement in rows or columns on
the surface of the cervix is destroyed. These changes are consistent with
those of cervical dysplasia, or cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN)
of varying degrees of severity, as seen by the pathologist when examining
a biopsy specimen of cervical tissue. Left untreated, in some women these
premalignant cells will slowly replace the normal cells on the surface of
the cervix and carcinoma in situ will develop. Finally, when the cells
begin to grow through the normal surface layer into the muscle and deeper
tissues, full-blown cancer is present.
Epidemiologic studies have identified a
number of factors that play a significant role in the development of CIN,
a precursor to cervical cancer (Palank 1998). As shown in Table
1, the
type and pattern of sexual activity, especially in teenagers, is a major
factor in determining whether a person becomes infected with HPV. As a
result of relaxed attitudes about sexuality among adolescents in many
cultures, the number of sexual partners that teenagers have before age 20
can be quite large, and each of their partners also may have had multiple
partners. As a consequence, this pattern of sexual activity increases
their risk of exposure to STDs, especially HPV.
Table 1. Risk Factors for Cervical Cancer
Another risk factor is having a blood
relative (mother or sister) with cervical cancer. Magnusson, Sparen and
Gyllensten (1999) compared the incidence of dysplasia and CIS in relatives
of women with disease and in age-matched controls. They found a
significant familial clustering among biological, but not adoptive,
relatives. For biological mothers compared to control cases, the relative
risk was 1.8 whereas for adoptive mothers the relative risk was not
significantly different from controls (1.1). For biological full sisters,
the relative risk was even higher (1.9) versus 1.1 for nonbiological
sisters. These data provide strong epidemiological evidence for a genetic
link to the development of cervical cancer and its precursors.
Suppression of the immune system due to
HIV infection also is an important risk factor because it makes the cells
lining the lower genital tract (vulva, vagina and cervix) more easily
infected by the cancer-inducing types of HPV (Stentella et al 1998). Other
less common conditions that cause immunosuppression include those
requiring chronic corticosteroid treatment, such as asthma or lupus
(McDonald 1999). Women also increase their risk for CIN by engaging in
other behaviors known to suppress the immune system. These include the use
of recreational drugs, alcohol and cigarettes. The latter is particularly
important because while a decrease in smoking among men has occurred, the
number of women who smoke has increased dramatically in recent
years—especially in teenage girls (McDonald 1999). Nicotine and the
byproducts of smoking are thought to increase a woman’s relative risk
for cervical cancer because they concentrate in the cervical mucus and
decrease the immune capability of Langerhan’s cells to protect cervical
tissue from invading oncogenic factors, such as HPV infection (Ylitalo et
al 1999).
In addition, there is substantial evidence
that HIV-positive women are at increased risk of developing cervical
cancer as well (Judson 1992). In two studies, both from high HIV
prevalence areas, a statistically significant association between HIV and
CIN was reported. Because the number of adolescents, as well as adults,
with HIV is rising in most countries where cervical cancer is largely
untreated, it can be expected that cervical cancer rates will continue to
increase, especially in areas where STDs and HIV/AIDS rates are high.
Finally, in many developing countries,
women who have abnormal Pap smears frequently do not receive treatment at
an early stage when cervical cancer could be prevented because:
-
there are long delays in reading and
reporting the results;
-
it is
difficult to locate the patient once the report becomes available;
-
the cost of treatment is not affordable
for many women, even when simple outpatient procedures are used; and
-
there is a lack of equipment as well as
service providers
trained to use and maintain it.
As a consequence, even in
countries where Pap smears are available, many women may not get the
treatment they need in a timely manner.
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