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Cervical determinants of anal HPV infection and high-grade anal lesions in women: a collaborative pooled analysis.

Authors :
Lin, Chunqing
Slama, Jiri
Gonzalez, Paula
Goodman, Marc T
Xia, Ningshao
Kreimer, Aimée R
Wu, Ting
Hessol, Nancy A
Shvetsov, Yurii
Ortiz, Ana P
Grinsztejn, Beatriz
Moscicki, Anna-Barbara
Heard, Isabelle
del Refugio González Losa, María
Kojic, Erna M
Schim van der Loeff, Maarten F
Wei, Feixue
Longatto-Filho, Adhemar
Mbulawa, Zizipho A
Palefsky, Joel M
Source :
Lancet Infectious Diseases. Aug2019, Vol. 19 Issue 8, p880-891. 12p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>Cervical cancer screening might contribute to the prevention of anal cancer in women. We aimed to investigate if routine cervical cancer screening results-namely high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) infection and cytohistopathology-predict anal HPV16 infection, anal high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions (HSIL) and, hence, anal cancer.<bold>Methods: </bold>We did a systematic review of MEDLINE, Embase, and the Cochrane library for studies of cervical determinants of anal HPV and HSIL published up to Aug 31, 2018. We centrally reanalysed individual-level data from 13 427 women with paired cervical and anal samples from 36 studies. We compared anal high-risk HPV prevalence by HIV status, cervical high-risk HPV, cervical cytohistopathology, age, and their combinations, using prevalence ratios (PR) and 95% CIs. Among 3255 women with anal cytohistopathology results, PRs were similarly calculated for all anal HSIL and HPV16-positive anal HSIL.<bold>Findings: </bold>Cervical and anal HPV infections were highly correlated. In HIV-negative women, anal HPV16 prevalence was 41% (447/1097) in cervical HPV16-positive versus 2% (214/8663) in cervical HPV16-negative women (PR 16·5, 95% CI 14·2-19·2, p<0·0001); these values were 46% (125/273) versus 11% (272/2588) in HIV-positive women (4·4, 3·7-5·3, p<0·0001). Anal HPV16 was also associated with cervical cytohistopathology, with a prevalence of 44% [101/228] for cervical cancer in HIV-negative women (PR vs normal cytology 14·1, 11·1-17·9, p<0·0001). Anal HSIL was associated with cervical high-risk HPV, both in HIV-negative women (from 2% [11/527] in cervical high-risk HPV-negative women up to 24% [33/138] in cervical HPV16-positive women; PR 12·9, 95% CI 6·7-24·8, p<0·0001) and HIV-positive women (from 8% [84/1094] to 17% [31/186]; 2·3, 1·6-3·4, p<0·0001). Anal HSIL was also associated with cervical cytohistopathology, both in HIV-negative women (from 1% [5/498] in normal cytology up to 22% [59/273] in cervical HSIL; PR 23·1, 9·4-57·0, p<0·0001) and HIV-positive women (from 7% [105/1421] to 25% [25/101]; 3·6, 2·5-5·3, p<0·0001). Prevalence of HPV16-positive anal HSIL was 23-25% in cervical HPV16-positive women older than 45 years (5/20 in HIV-negative women, 12/52 in HIV-positive women).<bold>Interpretation: </bold>HPV-based cervical cancer screening programmes might help to stratify anal cancer risk, irrespective of HIV status. For targeted secondary anal cancer prevention in high-risk groups, HIV-negative women with cervical HPV16, especially those older than 45 years, have a similar anal cancer risk profile to that of HIV-positive women.<bold>Funding: </bold>International Agency for Research on Cancer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14733099
Volume :
19
Issue :
8
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Lancet Infectious Diseases
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
137663252
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/S1473-3099(19)30164-1