Giorgio Bogani, Francesco Sopracordevole, Andrea Ciavattini, Enrico Vizza, Paolo Vercellini, Andrea Giannini, Fabio Ghezzi, Giovanni Scambia, Francesco Raspagliesi, Violante Di Donato,

Duration of human papillomavirus persistence and its relationship with recurrent cervical dysplasia

  • Cancer Research
  • Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
  • Oncology
  • Epidemiology

Objective To evaluate how the duration of human papillomavirus (HPV) persistence influences the risk of developing recurrent high-grade cervical dysplasia (CIN2+). Methods Data of patients with persistent HPV infection (at least at 6 months) after primary conization were extracted from a multi-institutional Italian database, retrospectively. Kaplan–Meier and Cox proportional hazards models were used to evaluate associations between duration of HPV persistence with the 5-year risk of developing recurrent CIN2+. Results Overall, 545 patients met the inclusion criteria. Positive margins were detected in 160 (29.3%) patients. Overall, 247 (45.3%) and 123 (22.6%) patients had a documented infection from HPV16/18, and other high-risk HPV types. 187 (34.3%), 73 (13.4%), and 40 (7.3%) were diagnosed with persistent HPV infection at 12, 18, and 24 months, respectively. Patients with HPV persistence at 6 months experienced a risk of recurrence of 7.46%. Twelve-month HPV persistence strongly correlates with the risk of developing the recurrent disease (risk of recurrence: 13.1%). While, having HPV persistence >12 months did not correlate with an increased risk of recurrence (hazard ratio: 1.34 (95% confidence interval: 0.78–2.32); P = 0.336, log-rank test). Conclusion HPV persistence is one of the most important factors predicting the risk of CIN2+ recurrence. The risk of CIN2+ recurrence increased with the increase of HPV persistence for up to 1 year. The persistence of HPV after the first year does not appear as a risk factor.

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