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Smoking
During HIV Infection May Alter the Natural History of HPV Infection
and Increase the Risk of Cervical Disease
Human
papillomavirus (HPV) infections in women are both common and clinically important. They have
been linked to the development of cervical
intraepithelial lesions and to invasive cervical cancer. The frequency of HPV infections and related lesions has been shown to be particularly high
among HIV-infected women.
HPV-related
cervical diseases have also been linked to
smoking, which, like HIV, may play a role
in the development of cervical disease, in part
through an effect on the immune response to
HPV.
A
review published more than a decade ago cited 33 epidemiological studies of the association between
smoking and cervical cancer. The majority
of those works found such an association, and
many of those that did not were said to have
methodological flaws.
The
author of the review concluded, "the evidence would
seem to support the conclusion that the association
between cigarette smoking and cervical cancer
is causal" (p. 955), the results of subsequent
work have supported these conclusions.
In
a recent study, which found a link between
smoking and cancer among women with oncogenic
HPV infection at baseline, the authors concluded,
"subsequent studies should examine the role of smoking in the multistage pathogenesis of cervical cancer"
In
the current study, HIV-infected (n = 1797) and
HIV-uninfected (n = 496) women were assessed
every 6 months for type-specific HPV DNA. Smoking
status was self-reported.
Covariates
included age, parity, sexual behavior, HIV load, CD4+ T cell count, and antiretroviral
therapy.
Results
Smoking
was positively associated with HPV prevalence
at baseline in HIV-infected women (P = .002)
and was significantly associated with type-specific HPV.
In
Cox models, detection of HPV was significantly
associated with smoking in HIV-infected women (P
= .003), but HPV persistence was not (P = .72).
The
overall likelihood of acquiring persistent HPV
was higher in smokers (P = .023) because
of greater incidence.
Conclusions
Among
HIV-infected women, smoking is associated with a significantly higher prevalence and incidence of
HPV infection. Smoking during HIV infection may
alter the natural history of HPV infection and
increase the risk of cervical disease.
05/12/04
Reference
H Minkoff
and others. Relationship between Smoking and Human Papillomavirus Infections in HIV-Infected and -Uninfected Women. The Journal of Infectious Diseases 189:1821-1828.
May 15, 2004.
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