Interaction of High- and Low-Risk Human Papillomavirus Genotypes is Associated with a Reduced Risk of Developing Cervical Cancer.
Date
2024-09-20Author
Hasanzadeh, MaliheRejali, Marzieh
Khalili-Tanha, Ghazaleh
Mehramiz, Mehraneh
Yavari, Negar
Nazari, Elham
Malakuti, Parnian
Maleki, Faezeh
Ghorbannezhad, Ghazale
Rafiei, Mahdi
Mirani, Anahita
Gholampoor-Shamkani, Negar
Saber, Hoda
Mousavi Seresht, Leila
Emamdadi-Aliabad, Zohreh
Mahdian, Zahra
Akbari, Mahdieh
Ferns, Gordon A
Al Moustafa, Ala-Eddin
Avan, Amir
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Cervical cancer is among the most common types of cancer in women and is associated with human papillomavirus (HPV) infection. The association between cervical cancer and high-risk HPV infection has been well documented. However, the effect of simultaneous infection with high- and low-risk HPV or low-risk HPV alone on the risk of developing cervical malignancy remains unanswered in guidelines. We investigated the association of high and low-risk HPVs (HR or LR) genotypes with cervical carcinoma risk and pathological and cytological information in cases recruited from a population-based cohort study of 790 patients. Correlation matrix and t-test were used for analysis. The percentage of HR+LR and HR-HPV16/18 were 9.30% and 11.20% in class II, 7.15% and 7.10% in class IV, and 7.15% and 5.80% in As-CUS smears. Interestingly, concurrent infection with HR-HPV and LR-HPV types led to a significant reduction in the risk of developing malignancy compared to the high-risk group (OR=0.3 (0.098-0.925), pvalue=0.04). The percentage of individuals with cervical malignancy was 10.2% and 28.2% within the co-infected and the HR-HPV participants. Our findings suggest that simultaneous infection with high- and low-risk HPV may reduce the risk of cervical malignancy.
DOI/handle
http://hdl.handle.net/10576/61084Collections
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