HPV Flashcards

1
Q

What genital HPV is and how to prevent it

A
  • Small double stranded DNA viruses that infect basal cells of mucosa (do not circulate in blood), very high prevalence
  • Best way to prevent it is avoiding sexual activities and/or getting vaccinated
  • Best way to detect is PAP smear and HPV DNA tests
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2
Q

How genital HPV is transmitted and how it escapes the immune system 1

A
  • Transmitted via mucosa-mucosa contact (not blood)
  • Rarely see vertical transmission
  • Oral sex, anal and vaginal sex transmission is common
  • Virus can only replicate in basal cells (access them via micro wound in epidermis)
  • Virus can infect langerhans cells, which causes them to move to lymphatics w/o activating the dendritic cells in the dermis thus avoiding an immune response to the virus
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3
Q

How genital HPV is transmitted and how it escapes the immune system 2

A
  • Decreased T cell numbers leads to increased risk of HPV, and most HPV infections are cleared in a yr by T cells (since it takes 1 yr HPV must be evading T cells)
  • HPV T cell immune evasion mechanisms: low profile, molecular mimicry, skewing of cytokine profiles, modulation of Ag presentation, interference w/ interferon response, modulation of cell adherence molecules, modulation of langerhans cells
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4
Q

To which diseases it is linked and how you can prevent or treat them 1

A
  • Types 6 and 11 associated w/ venereal warts
  • Types 16, 18 associated w/ cervical, vaginal, vulvar, penile, anal, and oro-pharyngeal CA
  • Virus alone produces 2 hits, but need 3 hits to get CA (smoking may be 3rd hit)
  • > 95% of women infected w/ HPV will be clear of the virus 1 yr after infection
  • Most HPV infections are either ASx or produce CIN1 (in females), the vast majority of which resolve
  • A smaller number of HPV infections produce CIN2 (some may resolve, some may progress) and an even smaller number produce CIN3 (usually progresses)
  • CIN2/3 (AKA HSIL) have a higher probability of progressing into CA
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5
Q

To which diseases it is linked and how you can prevent or treat them 2

A
  • Prevention: abstinence, fewer sex partners, screening, vaccines
  • Vaccines (gardasil) will only protect against strains of HPV that have not yet been contracted- will do nothing for the active infections
  • Current Rx options: low-grade lesions just observation, high-grade lesions do loop electrical excision procedure (LEEP)
  • May be possible to generate a vaccine w/ CD8 T cells that target cervical CA cells and thus destroy the CA (therapeutic vaccine)
  • Ipilimumab is Ab against CTLA-4 (which causes CD8 T cells to shut down), injections of it can lead to increased T cell response to cervical CA
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6
Q

What issues remain in elimination of cervical CA by vaccination

A
  • Vaccine is a virus-like particle w/ L1 protein (causes immune response), it is not infectious or pathogenic
  • HPV vaccines will not work against active infections, will not improve abnormal PAP smears or cervical CA
  • Multiple HPV types are linked to cervical CA and vaccines do not yet cover all of these types
  • Unknown how long protection lasts (at least 10 yrs)
  • Other issues: target population is 9-12, must reach poor people who need it most, false security- pap smears must be continued, timeframe to observe the effects on cervical CA long (25 yrs), social/political/fear barriers
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