意外生殖器人类乳头瘤病毒检测的比例不归因于传播和可能归因于潜伏感染:对宫颈癌筛查的意义。

Talía Malagón, Aaron MacCosham, Ann N Burchell, Mariam El-Zein, Pierre Paul Tellier, François Coutlée, Eduardo L Franco
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引用次数: 5

摘要

背景:人乳头瘤病毒(hpv)感染可能进入潜伏状态,并最终在失去免疫控制后重新激活。目前尚不清楚HPV检测事件中以前潜伏感染的重新激活与新传播的比例。方法:通过异性恋活动(HITCH)对2005 - 2011年在加拿大montracal招募的年轻新形成的异性恋伴侣进行前瞻性随访研究。我们用贝叶斯马尔可夫模型计算了非归因于性传播危险因素的HPV检测事件的比例。结果为估计后验分布的中位数(2.5 - 97.5%)。结果:849名参与者共发生544例HPV检测事件;33%的HPV检测事件发生在其HITCH伴侣对该HPV类型呈阴性且在随访期间没有其他性伴侣的参与者中。我们估计,在这一人群中,43%(38%-48%)的HPV检测事件不是由于最近的性传播,可能是潜伏感染的潜在重新激活。结论:在许多情况下,HPV检测结果阳性可能是过去感染的重新激活,而不是最近性行为或伴侣不忠引起的新感染。在宫颈癌筛查的背景下,应该考虑以前hpv阴性妇女潜伏感染重新激活的可能性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Proportion of Incident Genital Human Papillomavirus Detections not Attributable to Transmission and Potentially Attributable to Latent Infections: Implications for Cervical Cancer Screening.

Background: Infections with human papillomaviruses (HPVs) may enter a latent state, and eventually become reactivated following loss of immune control. It is unclear what proportion of incident HPV detections are reactivations of previous latent infections vs new transmissions.

Methods: The HPV Infection and Transmission among Couples through Heterosexual activity (HITCH) cohort study prospectively followed young newly formed heterosexual partners recruited between 2005 and 2011 in Montréal, Canada. We calculated the fraction of incident HPV detections nonattributable to sexual transmission risk factors with a Bayesian Markov model. Results are the median (2.5th-97.5th percentiles) of the estimated posterior distribution.

Results: A total of 544 type-specific incident HPV detection events occurred in 849 participants; 33% of incident HPV detections occurred in participants whose HITCH partners were negative for that HPV type and who reported no other sex partners over follow-up. We estimate that 43% (38%-48%) of all incident HPV detections in this population were not attributable to recent sexual transmission and might be potentially reactivation of latent infections.

Conclusions: A positive HPV test result in many cases may be a reactivated past infection, rather than a new infection from recent sexual behaviors or partner infidelity. The potential for reactivation of latent infections in previously HPV-negative women should be considered in the context of cervical cancer screening.

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