HPV Rates for Women Under 40 Increasing, Putting Them at Higher Risk of Related Cancers, Study Shows
New Research from Andrew Brouwer
Human papillomavirus infection rates are increasing in women born after 1980 who did
not receive the HPV vaccine—putting them at higher risk for HPV-related cancers, according
to a University of Michigan study.
While more than 90% of HPV-related cancers are preventable, HPV causes more than 40,000
cases of cancer in the United States each year, including cervical, oropharyngeal,
anal and other genital cancers. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, estimate
that at least half of all sexually active men and women will acquire HPV in their
lifetime.
"If we know which groups of people have the highest rates of HPV, we can do a better
job of preventing cancer through vaccination and screening," said lead author Andrew Brouwer, a researcher at U-M's School of Public Health.
Because testing for genital HPV started in 2003 for women and and in 2013 for men,
there are no direct measurements of how HPV incidence and prevalence have changed
over the past decades—before the vaccine became available for women in 2006 and for
men in 2009.
Brouwer said previous analyses focused only on measures of current HPV infection (viral
DNA) or past HPV infection (antibodies), producing sometimes competing results, making
it difficult for experts to predict current and future trends.
For their analysis, Brouwer and his colleagues developed a model that uses both HPV
infection and past infection data, as well as mathematical representations of the
underlying mechanisms of infection, recovery and the generation of antibodies, to
paint a better picture of HPV prevalence in the present and past.
Their model indicates that while there may be a substantial increase in HPV prevalence
in more recent birth cohorts, HPV vaccination may ultimately control adverse HPV-related
outcomes, including genital warts and cancer. Questions still remain, such as why
there is a peak in HPV infection among 45-to-55-year-olds.
"Did everyone in this cohort have higher HPV throughout their lifetimes? Or is it
more a function of biological or behavior changes when people reach this age?" Brouwer
said.
Brouwer said his group will now try to understand how HPV is transmitted between genital,
oral and anal sites, and plan to study multisite HPV infections in young people.