REVIEW

Clinical significance of human papilloma virus infection in the cervical lesions

  • Shuang LI 1 ,
  • Yu-Han MENG 1 ,
  • Hu TING 1 ,
  • Jian SHEN 2 ,
  • Ding MA , 1
Expand
  • 1. Cancer Biology Research Center, Tongji Hospital, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan 430030, China
  • 2. Wuhan Central Hospital, Wuhan 430014, China

Received date: 11 May 2010

Accepted date: 20 May 2010

Published date: 05 Sep 2010

Copyright

2014 Higher Education Press and Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg

Abstract

Cervical lesions have been regarded as the common and frequently occurring diseases in China. Recently, the morbidity and youth tendency of cervical cancer have gradually increased. Cervical cancer, related with human papilloma virus (HPV) infection, has been one of the severest diseases threatening health and life of women, and is an infectious disease. The universality of HPV infection in the reproductive tract should not be ignored. The well-known risk factors of HPV infection in cervical lesions consist of high-risk sexual behaviors, immunosuppression, age, contraceptive methods, the concurrent infection of other sexually transmitted diseases, etc. The variation of cervical lesions induced by HPV infection is involved in the continuous pathological process, including the subclinical, latent, and persistent infection of high risk (HR)-HPV, chronic cervicitis with abnormal results of cytological examination, cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN), and cervical cancer. The outcome of patients with HPV infection is influenced by many factors, such as HPV subtype dominance, persistent HPV infection, HPV loading dose, and multiple HPV infection. Controlling HR-HPV persistent infection should be an important strategy for reducing cervical lesions.

Cite this article

Shuang LI , Yu-Han MENG , Hu TING , Jian SHEN , Ding MA . Clinical significance of human papilloma virus infection in the cervical lesions[J]. Frontiers of Medicine, 2010 , 4(3) : 264 -270 . DOI: 10.1007/s11684-010-0094-6

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the Special Funds for State Key Development Program for Basic Research of China (973 Program) (No. 2009CB521800) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant Nos. 30672227, 30770913, 30628029, 30500596 and 30600667).
1
BekkersR L, MassugerL F, BultenJ, MelchersW J. Epidemiological and clinical aspects of human papillomavirus detection in the prevention of cervical cancer. Rev Med Virol, 2004, 14(2): 95–105

DOI

2
HerreroR, HildesheimA, BrattiC, ShermanM E, HutchinsonM, MoralesJ, BalmacedaI, GreenbergM D, AlfaroM, BurkR D, WacholderS, PlummerM, SchiffmanM. Population-based study of human papillomavirus infection and cervical neoplasia in rural Costa Rica. J Natl Cancer Inst, 2000, 92(6): 464–474

DOI

3
InfantolinoC, FabrisP, InfantolinoD, BiasinM R, VenzaE, TosittiG, MinucciD. Usefulness of human papilloma virus testing in the screening of cervical cancer precursor lesions: a retrospective study in 314 cases. Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol, 2000, 93(1): 71–75

DOI

4
SellorsJ W, MahonyJ B, KaczorowskiJ, LytwynA, BanguraH, ChongS, LorinczA, DalbyD M, JanjusevicV, KellerJ L. Prevalence and predictors of human papillomavirus infection in women in Ontario, Canada. Survey of HPV in Ontario Women (SHOW) Group. CMAJ, 2000, 163(5): 503–508

5
DuttaguptaC, SenguptaS, RoyM, SenguptaD, ChakrabortyS, BhattacharyaP, RoyS, GhoshS. Oncogenic human papillomavirus (HPV) infection and uterine cervical cancer: a screening strategy in the perspective of rural India. Eur J Cancer Prev, 2002, 11(5): 447–456

DOI

6
BoschF X, LorinczA, MunozN, MeijerC J, ShahK V. The causal relation between human papillomavirus and cervical cancer. J Clin Pathol, 2002, 55(4): 244–265

7
DeaconJ M, EvansC D, YuleR, DesaiM, BinnsW, TaylorC, PetoJ. Sexual behaviour and smoking as determinants of cervical HPV infection and of CIN3 among those infected: a case-control study nested within the Manchester cohort. Br J Cancer, 2000, 83(11): 1565–1572

DOI

8
de Lima SoaresV, de MesquitaA M, CavalcanteF G, SilvaZ P, HoraV, DiedrichT, de Carvalho SilvaP, de MeloP G, DacalA R, de CarvalhoE M, FeldmeierH. Sexually transmitted infections in a female population in rural north-east Brazil: prevalence, morbidity and risk factors. Trop Med Int Health, 2003, 8(7): 595–603

DOI

9
HeardI P, TassieJ M P, SchmitzV P, MandelbrotL, Kazatchkine M D, Orth G. Increased risk of cervical disease among human immunodeficiency virus-infected women with severe immunosuppression and high human papillomavirus load(1). Obstet Gynecol, 2000, 96(3): 403–409

DOI

10
BekkersR L, MassugerL F, BultenJ, MelchersW J. Epidemiological and clinical aspects of human papillomavirus detection in the prevention of cervical cancer. Rev Med Virol, 2004, 14(2): 95–105

DOI

11
StolerM H. Advances in cervical screening technology. Mod Pathol, 2000, 13(3): 275–284

DOI

12
LiL K, DaiM, CliffordG M, YaoW Q, ArslanA, LiN, ShiJ F, SnijdersP J, MeijerC J, QiaoY L, FranceschiS. Human papillomavirus infection in Shenyang City, People’s Republic of China: A population-based study. Br J Cancer, 2006, 95(11): 1593–1597

DOI

13
SellorsJ W, KarwalajtysT L, KaczorowskiJ A, MahonyJ B, LytwynA, ChongS, SparrowJ, LorinczA; Survey of HPV in Older Ontario Women (SHOOW) Group. Prevalence of infection with carcinogenic human papillomavirus among older women. CMAJ, 2002, 167(8): 871–873

14
FerreraA, VelemaJ P, FigueroaM, BulnesR, ToroL A, ClarosJ M, de BarahonaO, MelchersW J. Co-factors related to the causal relationship between human papillomavirus and invasive cervical cancer in Honduras. Int J Epidemiol, 2000, 29(5): 817–825

DOI

15
WalboomersJ M, JacobsM V, ManosM M, BoschF X, KummerJ A, ShahK V, SnijdersP J, PetoJ, MeijerC J, MuñozN. Human papillomavirus is a necessary cause of invasive cervical cancer worldwide. J Pathol, 1999, 189(1): 12–19

DOI

16
FranceschiS, HerreroR, La VecchiaC. Cervical cancer screening in Europe. What next? Eur J Cancer, 2000, 36(17): 2272–2275

DOI

17
MuñozN, BoschF X, de SanjoséS, HerreroR, CastellsaguéX, ShahK V, SnijdersP J, MeijerC J; International Agency for Research on Cancer Multicenter Cervical Cancer Study Group. Epidemiologic classification of human papillomavirus types associated with cervical cancer. N Engl J Med, 2003, 348(6): 518–527

DOI

18
zur HausenH. Papillomaviruses causing cancer: evasion from host-cell control in early events in carcinogenesis. J Natl Cancer Inst, 2000, 92(9): 690–698

DOI

19
KulasingamS L, HughesJ P, KiviatN B, MaoC, WeissN S, KuypersJ M, KoutskyL A. Evaluation of human papillomavirus testing in primary screening for cervical abnormalities: comparison of sensitivity, specificity, and frequency of referral. JAMA, 2002, 288(14): 1749–1757

20
LiawK L, GlassA G, ManosM M, GreerC E, ScottD R, ShermanM, BurkR D, KurmanR J, WacholderS, RushB B, CadellD M, LawlerP, TaborD, SchiffmanM. Detection of human papillomavirus DNA in cytologically normal women and subsequent cervical squamous intraepithelial lesions. J Natl Cancer Inst, 1999, 91(11): 954–960

DOI

21
ShermanM E, LorinczA T, ScottD R, WacholderS, CastleP E, GlassA G, Mielzynska-LohnasI, RushB B, SchiffmanM. Baseline cytology, human papillomavirus testing, and risk for cervical neoplasia: a 10-year cohort analysis. J Natl Cancer Inst, 2003, 95(1): 46–52

DOI

22
KuhnL, DennyL, PollackA, LorinczA, RichartR M, WrightT C. Human papillomavirus DNA testing for cervical cancer screening in low-resource settings. J Natl Cancer Inst, 2000, 92(10): 818–825

DOI

23
PehW L, MiddletonK, ChristensenN, NichollsP, EgawaK, SotlarK, BrandsmaJ, PercivalA, LewisJ, LiuW J, DoorbarJ. Life cycle heterogeneity in animal models of human papillomavirus-associated disease. J Virol, 2002, 76(20): 10401–10416

DOI

24
WoodmanC B, CollinsS, WinterH, BaileyA, EllisJ, PriorP, YatesM, RollasonT P, YoungL S. Natural history of cervical human papillomavirus infection in young women: a longitudinal cohort study. Lancet, 2001, 357(9271): 1831–1836

25
YangY J, ZhaoJ, XueQ L. The associativity of the different subtypes of human papilloma virus infection and cervical lesions. Zhongguo Fu Chan Ke Li Chuang Za Zhi, 2006, 7(4): 253–256 (in Chinese)

26
RuT H, WeiL H, WuR F, ZhouY Q. The subtype dominance of human papillomavirus infection in the different degrees of cervical lesions. Huazhong Keji Daxue Xebao (Yixueban), 2006, 35(6): 771–773 (in Chinese)

27
TsaiH T, WuC H, LaiH L, LiR N, TungY C, ChuangH Y, WuT N, LinL J, HoC K, LiuH W, WuM T. Association between quantitative high-risk human papillomavirus DNA load and cervical intraepithelial neoplasm risk. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev, 2005, 14(11 Pt 1): 2544–2549

DOI

28
SchellekensM C, DijkmanA, AzizM F, SiregarB, CornainS, Kolkman-UljeeS, PetersL A, FleurenG J. Prevalence of single and multiple HPV types in cervical carcinomas in Jakarta, Indonesia. Gynecol Oncol, 2004, 93(1): 49–53

DOI

29
DelucaG D, LuceroR H, Martin de CivettaM T, VicenteL, de GorodnerO L, ScheloverE, AlonsoJ M. Human papillomavirus genotypes in women with cervical cytological abnormalities from an area with high incidence of cervical cancer. Rev Inst Med Trop Sao Paulo, 2004, 46(1): 9–12

DOI

30
BulkS, BerkhofJ, BulkmansN W, ZielinskiG D, RozendaalL, van KemenadeF J, SnijdersP J, MeijerC J. Preferential risk of HPV16 for squamous cell carcinoma and of HPV18 for adenocarcinoma of the cervix compared to women with normal cytology in The Netherlands. Br J Cancer, 2006, 94(1): 171–175

DOI

31
AltekruseS F, LaceyJ V Jr, BrintonL A, GravittP E, SilverbergS G, BarnesW A Jr, GreenbergM D, HadjimichaelO C, McGowanL, MortelR, SchwartzP E, HildesheimA. Comparison of human papillomavirus genotypes, sexual, and reproductive risk factors of cervical adenocarcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma: Northeastern United States. Am J Obstet Gynecol, 2003, 188(3): 657–663

DOI

32
LombardI, Vincent-SalomonA, ValidireP, ZafraniB, de la RochefordiéreA, CloughK, FavreM, PouillartP, Sastre-GarauX. Human papillomavirus genotype as a major determinant of the course of cervical cancer. J Clin Oncol, 1998, 16(8): 2613–2619

33
CliffordG M, SmithJ S, AguadoT, FranceschiS. Comparison of HPV type distribution in high-grade cervical lesions and cervical cancer: a meta-analysis. Br J Cancer, 2003, 89(1): 101–105

DOI

34
WomackS D, ChirenjeZ M, GaffikinL, BlumenthalP D, McGrathJ A, ChipatoT, NgwalleS, MunjomaM, ShahK V. HPV-based cervical cancer screening in a population at high risk for HIV infection. Int J Cancer, 2000, 85(2): 206–210

35
Damasus-AwataiG, Freeman-WangT. Human papilloma virus and cervical screening. Curr Opin Obstet Gynecol, 2003, 15(6): 473–477

DOI

36
SchlechtN F, KulagaS, RobitailleJ, FerreiraS, SantosM, MiyamuraR A, Duarte-FrancoE, RohanT E, FerenczyA, VillaL L, FrancoE L. Persistent human papillomavirus infection as a predictor of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia. JAMA, 2001, 286(24): 3106–3114

37
JosefssonA M, MagnussonP K, YlitaloN, SørensenP, Qwarforth-TubbinP, AndersenP K, MelbyeM, AdamiH O, GyllenstenU B. Viral load of human papilloma virus 16 as a determinant for development of cervical carcinoma in situ: a nested case-control study. Lancet, 2000, 355(9222): 2189–2193

DOI

38
HuangZ H, QianD Y, WangD, CenJ M, ShuY H. The related research about Human papilloma viral loading dose and cervical precancerosis lesions and cervical cancer. Zhongguo Fuyou Baojian, 2006, 21(11): 1557–1559 (in Chinese)

39
SunC A, LiuJ F, WuD M, NiehS, YuC P, ChuT Y. Viral load of high-risk human papillomavirus in cervical squamous intraepithelial lesions. Int J Gyne Obstet, 2002, 76(1): 41–47

DOI

40
SunC A, LaiH C, ChangC C, NeihS, YuC P, ChuT Y. The significance of human papillomavirus viral load in prediction of histologic severity and size of squamous intraepithelial lesions of uterine cervix. Gynecol Oncol, 2001, 83(1): 95–99

DOI

41
SchlechtN F, TrevisanA, Duarte-FrancoE, RohanT E, FerenczyA, VillaL L, FrancoE L. Viral load as a predictor of the risk of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia. Int J Cancer, 2003, 103(4): 519–524

DOI

42
DalsteinV, RiethmullerD, PrétetJ L, Le Bail CarvalK, SautièreJ L, CarbilletJ P, KantelipB, SchaalJ P, MouginC. Persistence and load of high-risk HPV are predictors for development of high-grade cervical lesions: a longitudinal French cohort study. Int J Cancer, 2003, 106(3): 396–403

DOI

43
JosefssonA M, MagnussonP K, YlitaloN, SørensenP, Qwarforth-TubbinP, AndersenP K, MelbyeM, AdamiH O, GyllenstenU B. Viral load of human papilloma virus 16 as a determinant for development of cervical carcinoma in situ: a nested case-control study. Lancet, 2000, 355(9222): 2189–2193

DOI

44
MobergM, GustavssonI, WilanderE, GyllenstenU. High viral loads of human papillomavirus predict risk of invasive cervical carcinoma. Br J Cancer, 2005, 92(5): 891–894

DOI

45
LorinczA T, CastleP E, ShermanM E, ScottD R, GlassA G, WacholderS, RushB B, GravittP E, SchusslerJ E, SchiffmanM. Viral load of human papillomavirus and risk of CIN3 or cervical cancer. Lancet, 2002, 360(9328): 228–229

DOI

46
HoG Y, BurkR D, KleinS, KadishA S, ChangC J, PalanP, BasuJ, TachezyR, LewisR, RomneyS. Persistent genital human papillomavirus infection as a risk factor for persistent cervical dysplasia. J Natl Cancer Inst, 1995, 87(18): 1365–1371

DOI

47
BurdE M. Human papillomavirus and cervical cancer. Clin Microbiol Rev, 2003, 16(1): 1–17

DOI

48
LeeS A, KangD, SeoS S, JeongJ K, YooK Y, JeonY T, KimJ W, ParkN H, KangS B, LeeH P, SongY S. Multiple HPV infection in cervical cancer screened by HPVDNAChip. Cancer Lett, 2003, 198(2): 187–192

DOI

Outlines

/