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American Indian Health
Avian Influenza
CPR
Drowning
Echocardiography
Fetal Surgery
HPV
Macular Degeneration
Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis

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Causes: Viral infection spread through skin (usually sexual) contact

Symptoms: Warts or cancer in genital and anal areas

Duration: Acute in initial infection, then chronic and often recurrent

Treatments: For warts, topical ointments, creams, resins, or gels and electrocautery, cryosurgery, or laser surgery; for cancer, chemotherapy, radiation, surgery; prevention possible with vaccine


Magills Medical Guide, 4th rev. ed.

Editors: Anne Lynn S. Chang, M.D., Stanford University; H. Bradford Hawley, M.D., Wright State University; Laurence M. Katz, M.D., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Nancy A. Piotrowski, Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley; Connie Rizzo, M.D., Ph.D., Columbia University

ISBN: 978-1-58765-384-1
List Price: $395

November 2007 · 5 volumes · 3,206 pages · 8"x10"

Magill's Medical Guide 4th rev. ed.
Human Papillomavirus (HPV)

Also Known As: Papovaviruses

Anatomy or System Affected: Anus, genitals, reproductive system, skin

Specialties and Related Fields: Epidemiology, gynecology, oncology, public health, virology

Definition: A group of viruses, some of which are sexually transmitted and associated with genital warts and genital cancer.

Key Terms
cervical cancer: cancer of the cervix that is associated with human papillomavirus

Gardasil: a vaccine against the common forms of human papillomavirus that cause cervical cancer

genital warts: warts occurring in the genital and anal areas and often associated with cancer of the reproductive tract

Pap smear: a screening test to detect precancerous and cancerous cells of the cervix

Causes and Symptoms
Papillomaviruses are deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) viruses than infect the skin and mucous membranes. Human papillomaviruses belong to a group of papillomaviruses that consists of nearly 120 strains. Most strains are virtually harmless, causing nothing more than benign skin warts (papillomas), while others cause genital warts (condyloma acuminate) and may cause cancer.

Sexual contact is the primary mechanism by which the virus is acquired. About thirty HPV strains are sexually transmitted and can infect the external genitalia, urethra, anus, rectum, and sometimes the mouth and throat. Some low-risk strains cause genital warts, while the ten more virulent, high-risk strains cause abnormal Papanicolaou (Pap) smears and can in some instances cause cancer of the cervix, vagina, vulva, penis, scrotum, anus, and/or the mouth and pharynx. Almost all cases of cervical cancer are the result of persistent HPV infection.

HPV is one of the most common sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). It has been estimated that more than 50 percent of sexually active people and up to 75 percent of sexually active women will develop an HPV infection during their lifetimes. Although the active viral infection is usually cleared by the immune system within a few months, it often remains dormant and can later cause a reinfection. Babies of infected women may contract potentially life-threatening HPV infections during delivery.

Women are more susceptible to developing genital warts. Many infected people, however, do not have genital warts. Infected women who are asymptomatic are often diagnosed by an abnormal Pap smear. In 2003, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the use of testing for high-risk HPV DNA as a routine screening procedure. DNA testing is also used as a confirmatory test for HPV after an abnormal Pap test.

Frequent Pap tests are the best way to diagnose HPV infections in asymptomatic women. About 10 percent of HPV-infected women will develop precancerous changes in their cervix, and about 8 percent of these women will develop the early stages of cervical cancer. Since persistent HPV infection is a hallmark of developing cervical cancer and since the cancer usually develops slowly over five to ten years, early diagnosis and treatment can be effective in preventing cervical cancer.

Genital warts are highly contagious and are transmitted through skin-to-skin contact from sexual activity. Risk reduction for HPV infection can be achieved by reducing the frequency of sexual contact. Condom use may partially reduce the risk of HPV infection in women. Since condoms do not cover all infected areas, however, their use does not eliminate the risk of infection. Research has suggested that microbicides may prevent infection if they are applied before sexual activity.

Treatment and Therapy
Since there is no cure for an HPV infection, the primary treatments are for warts. Some treatments involve the use of topical ointments, creams, resins, and gels such as imiquimod (Aldara), podophyllin and podofilox (Condylox), and 5-fluorouracil, as well as trichloroacetic acid. Alternatively, warts may be removed by electrocautery, cryosurgery, laser, or conventional surgery.

In 2006, the FDA approved Gardasil, developed by Merck, for use as a preventive vaccine for the most prevalent HPV strains that cause cervical cancer and genital warts. Gardasil is active against two low-risk HPV strains that are the leading cause of genital warts and two high-risk strains that cause up to 70 percent of cervical cancers in the United States. Gardasil is recommended for females between the ages of nine and twenty-six. Routine Pap testing is still recommended, since Gardasil does not protect against all strains of HPV. GlaxoSmith Kline is also developing an HPV vaccine known as Cervarix.

Perspective and Prospects
HPV was first described as a cause of skin warts in 1907. The relationship between sexual activity and cervical cancer was noted when it was discovered that women who have or who have had multiple sexual partners have a greater risk of developing cervical cancer than do women who have had few or no sexual partners. It was not until the 1980's that HPV was linked to cervical cancer.

The mechanism by which HPV causes cancer has recently been determined. Two proteins encoded by HPV DNA attach to and inactivate cellular proteins that control cell division. With these cellular proteins inactivated, the cell multiplies uncontrollably. Current research is directed toward the development of a vaccine that would inactivate the viral proteins that bind to and inhibit the proteins controlling cell division.

Since sisters of women with cervical cancer have a higher risk of developing cervical cancer, it is thought that genetics may be involved in the progression of the disease.

Charles L. Vigue, Ph.D.

See Also
Cancer; Carcinogens; Cervical, ovarian, and uterine cancers; Genital disorders, female; Genital disorders, male; Gynecology; Immunization and vaccination; Pap smears; Reproductive system; Screening; Sexually transmitted diseases (STDs); Skin; Skin cancer; Skin disorders; Viral infections; Warts; Women's health.

Further Information
Crum, Christopher P., and Gerard J. Nuovo. Genital Papillomaviruses and Related Neoplasms. New York: Raven Press, 1991. An overview of HPV and its role in disease.

Eifel, Patricia J., and Charles Levenback, eds. Cancer of the Female Lower Genital Tract. Hamilton, Ont.: B. C. Becker, 2001. Several chapters are dedicated to cervical cancer. Well illustrated with numerous color photographs.

Gross, Gerd, and Geo von Krogh, eds. Human Papillomavirus Infections in Dermatovenereology. Boca Raton, Fla.: CRC Press, 1997. An overview of skin diseases caused by HPV. Each chapter is by a different expert. Illustrated with black-and-white photographs.

McCance, Dennis J., ed. Human Papilloma Viruses. New York: Elsevier Science, 2002. An overview of HPV including its role in causing disease. Each chapter was written by an expert in the field.

Mindel, Adrian, ed. Genital Warts: Human Papillomavirus Infection. Boston: Arnold, 1995. Each chapter is by a different expert. Several chapters are devoted to HPVs association with cancer. Illustrated with several black-and-white photographs.

Sterling, Jane C., and Stephen K. Tyring, eds. Human Papillomaviruses: Clinical and Scientific Advances. New York: Arnold, 2001. An excellent book illustrated with numerous colored photographs. Each chapter is by a different investigator in the field.


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