HPV Flashcards
1
Q
Cervical Cancer Statistics
A
- 10% of female cancers diagnosed worldwide are cancers of the cervix
- Cervical cancer is most commonly diagnosed cancer among women in Southern Africa and Central America
- Cervical cancer is the 2nd most common cause of cancer-related death for women world-wide
2
Q
Incidence, Prevalence and Mortality
A
- Incidence- rate at which new cases are diagnosed in population during a specific period
- Prevalence- proportion of population affected by disease at a specific time
- Mortality- rate at which individuals die from a disease
3
Q
Malignant Neoplasm
A
- Tumor that tends to grow, invade, and metastasize
- 2nd leading cause of death in women in U.S.
- Of malignant neoplasms, cervical cancer:
- is in the top 10 for incidence only in Blacks and Hispanics
- Not in the top 10 for death rate among any race
4
Q
HPV
A
- Human papillomavirus
- Double-stranded circular DNA episome
- Surrounded by 72 penatmeric capsids
- Each capsid is a viral protein
- L1 and L2 genes encode for capsid proteins
- Individual capsids will assemble into virus-like particles (VLPs) when expressed in microbial organisms
- VLPs lack viral DNA
5
Q
Types of HPV
A
- Oncogene- gene that causes transformation of normal cells into cancerous tumor cells, especially a viral gene that transforms a host cell into tumor cell
- HPV 16 accounts for nearly 60% of all cervical cancer
- HPV18 accounts for 10-20% of all cervical cancers
- HPV 6 and 11 are associated with 90% of genital warts
6
Q
Oncogenic HPV
A
- Affect anal and genital areas
- About 40 types
- High risk
- 30 types (16,18, 31, 33, 45, 52, 58, 59)
- Low-High grade cervical changes
- Anogenital cancers
- Low risk
- Genital warts
- Respiratory papillomas
7
Q
Female Anatomy
A
- Cervix separates uterus from vagina
- Cervix has flat squamous cells in region near vagina
- Squamous- plate like, thin, and flat
- Dysplasia- alteration in size, shape, and organization of adult cells
- Carcinoma- malignant new growth made up of epithelial cells tending to infiltrate surrounding tissues
8
Q
Cytology of Cervix
A
9
Q
HPV Clearance
A
- HPV infection doesn’t always lead to cervical cancer
- 80% of infections are transient, asymptomatic, and resolve without treatment and HPV is no longer detectable in cervix
- In women with intact immune systems, HPV infection generally resolves without intervention within 18-24 months
- LSIL- low grade squamous intraepithelial lesion- mild dysplasia
- HSIL- high grade squamous intraepithelial lesion- moderate to severe dysplasia
- Average time from infection to invasive cervical cancer is 15 years
10
Q
HPV-mediated progression to cervical cancer (1-5)
A
- Basal cells in cervical epithelium rest on basement membrane
- Basal cells divide and migrate toward superficial zone
- Sexually transmitted HPV is thought to access basal cells through micro-abrasions in cervical epithelium
- Following infection, early HPV genes (E1, E2, E4, E5, E6, and E7) are expressed and viral DNA replicates from episomal DNA (not integrated into nuclear DNA)
- In upper layers of epithelium (midzone and superficial zone) viral genome is replicated further, and late genes (L1 and L2) are expressed
- L1 and L2 encapsidate viral genomes to form progeny virions in nucleus
11
Q
HPV-mediated progression to cervical cancer (6-9)
A
- Shed virus can then initiate a new infection
- Low-grade intraepithelial lesions support productive viral replication
- Unknown number of high-risk HPV infections progress to high grade cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (HSIL)
- Progression of untreated lesions to invasive cancer is associated with integration of HPV genome into host chromosomes with subsequent up regulation of E6 and E7 oncogene expression
12
Q
Prevalence of HPV
A
- Peak prevalence of transient infections with carcinogenic types of HPV occur among women during their teens and 20s, after initiation of sexual activity
- Peak prevalence of cervical cancer occurs 10 years later
- Peak prevalence of invasive cencers occur at 40 to 50 years old
- 36% of women <25 re positive for HPV
- Up to 70% of sexually active college-age students are HPV infected
- Only 3% of women >45 are positive for HPV
13
Q
Prevention of Progression
A
- Conventional model of cervical-cancer prevention is based on repeated rounds of cytologic emanation, including Pap smears
- Alternative strategies include HPV vaccination of adolescents, one or two rounds of HPV screening at the peak ages of treatable precancerous conditions and early cancer, or both
14
Q
Pap Test
A
- Screening test to detect premalignant and malignant cells in cervix
- Invented by and named after Dr. Georgios Papanikolaou
- Cells are collected for outer opening of cervix
- Cells are placed on glass slide and checked for abnormalities under microscope
15
Q
Pap Histology
A