HPV is a group of more than 200 related viruses, some of which are spread through vaginal, anal, or oral sex.
Sexually transmitted HPV types fall into two groups, low risk and high risk.
HPV infection is common: Nearly all sexually active people are infected with HPV almost immediately once they become sexually active. Around half of these infections are with a high-risk HPV type.
Most HPV infections don’t cause cancer: Your immune system usually controls HPV infections so they don’t cause cancer.
High-risk HPV infections that persist can cause cancer: Sometimes HPV infections are not successfully controlled by your immune system. When a high-risk HPV infection persists for many years, it can lead to cell changes that, if untreated, may get worse over time and become cancer.
HPV vaccination can prevent cancer: HPV vaccines can prevent infection with disease-causing HPV types, preventing many HPV-related cancers and cases of genital warts.
Long-lasting infections with high-risk HPVs can cause cancer in parts of the body where HPV infects cells, such as in the cervix, oropharynx (the part of the throat at the back of the mouth, including the soft palate, the base of the tongue, and the tonsils), anus, rectum, penis, vagina, and vulva.
HPV infects the squamous cells that line the inner surfaces of these organs. For this reason, most HPV-related cancers are a type of cancer called squamous cell carcinoma. Some cervical cancers come from HPV infection of gland cells in the cervix and are called adenocarcinomas.
HPV-related cancers include:
In the United States, high-risk HPVs cause 3% of all cancers in women and 2% of all cancers in men. There are about 44,000 new cases of cancer in parts of the body where HPV is often found, and HPV is estimated to cause about 34,000 cancers each year, according to the latest statistics from the Centers for Disease Control.
Worldwide, the burden of HPV-related cancers is much greater. High-risk HPVs cause about 5% of all cancers worldwide, with an estimated 570,000 women and an estimated 60,000 men getting an HPV-related cancer each year. Cervical cancer is among the most common cancers and a leading cause of cancer-related deaths in low- and middle-income countries, where screening tests and treatment of early cervical cell changes are not readily available.
HPV is transmitted through vaginal intercourse, anal and oral sex, and other intimate, skin-to-skin contact. The infection passes easily between sexual partners. Condoms and dental dams can reduce the likelihood of HPV transmission but do not completely prevent it.
No, infection with high-risk HPV does not cause symptoms. The precancerous cell changes caused by a persistent HPV infection at the cervix also do not cause symptoms. However, precancerous lesions at other sites in the body may cause symptoms. And if an HPV infection develops into cancer, the cancer may cause symptoms.
The HPV vaccine Gardasil 9® protects against infection with nine HPV types: the two low-risk HPV types that cause most genital warts, plus the seven high-risk HPV types that cause most HPV-related cancers.
HPV vaccination is recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)’s Advisory Committee on Immunizations Practices (ACIP) to prevent new HPV infections and HPV-associated diseases, including some cancers.
HPV vaccination provides strong protection against new HPV infections, but the vaccine does not cure, and is not used to treat, HPV infections or diseases caused by HPV. HPV vaccination offers the most protection when given before someone is exposed to the virus.
The HPV vaccine series is recommended for girls and boys at the age of 11 or 12; the series can be started at age 9. Children who start the series before age 15 need two doses to be protected. For young people who didn’t get vaccinated on time, HPV vaccination is recommended up to age 45; those who receive their first dose at age 15 or older need three doses to be protected. A fair warning, many insurance companies only cover it up to age 26 reflecting the older guidelines.
Yes, the vaccine can be given to adults between the ages of 27 and 45 who didn’t receive all vaccine doses earlier. In fact, it is now recommended. Adults in this age group benefit less from the vaccine because they are more likely to have been exposed to HPV already. But if you are concerned that you are at risk for new HPV infections, you should talk with your health care provider about whether the vaccine may be right for you.
Screening tests are tests used to check for disease when there are no symptoms. The goal of screening for cervical cancer is to find precancerous cell changes at an early stage, even before they become cancer and when treatment can work to prevent cancer from ever happening. Currently, cervical cancer is the only HPV-caused cancer for which FDA-approved screening tests are available.
Cervical cancer screening tests:
These screening ages and intervals apply to most women:
Depending on the test results and her age, a woman may have another test after 12 months, or she may have an exam called a colposcopy to allow her provider to examine the cervix and, if needed, remove a sample of tissue for analysis (a procedure called a biopsy).
Sometimes, after a several negative HPV tests, a woman may have a positive HPV test result. This is not necessarily a sign of a new HPV infection, and it doesn’t mean that she or her partner has a new sexual partner. Sometimes an HPV infection can become active again after many years. Other viruses behave this way as well, for example the chickenpox virus can reactivate later in life to cause shingles.
There is no way to tell whether a newly positive HPV test result is a sign of a new infection or a reactivation of an old infection. Researchers don’t know whether a reactivated HPV infection has the same risk of causing precancer or cancer as a new HPV infection.
There are no FDA-approved tests to detect HPV infections or HPV-caused cell changes in anal, rectal, vulvar, vaginal, penile, or oropharyngeal tissues. However, there is some evidence that, among populations that are at higher risk for HPV infection, such as men who have sex with men or men who are HIV-positive, anal Pap tests may help to detect early cell changes or precancerous cells. In anal Pap tests, a sample of anal cells is checked for abnormal cells.
Although HPV infection itself cannot be treated, there are treatments for the precancerous cell changes caused by infection with high-risk HPV.
Once high-risk HPV infects cells, it interferes with the ways in which these cells communicate with one another, causing infected cells to multiply in an uncontrolled manner. These infected cells are usually recognized and controlled by the immune system. However, sometimes the infected cells remain and continue to grow, eventually forming an area of precancerous cells that, if not treated, can become cancer. Research has found that it can take 10 to 20 years, or even longer, for HPV-infected cervical cells to develop into a cancerous tumor.
Among women whose cervical cells are infected with high-risk HPV, several factors increase the chance that the infection will be long lasting and lead to precancerous cervical cells:
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