2017, Number 04
Detection of HPV in women with no cellular alterations detected in uterine cytology in Castilla y León, population study
García S, Domínguez-Gil M, Gayete J, Blanco M, Eiros JM, de Frutos M, López-Urrutia L, Viñuela L, Ramos C, Jiménez JM
Language: Spanish
References: 0
Page: 217-223
PDF size: 101.62 Kb.
ABSTRACT
Objetive: To estimate the prevalence of cervical changes and alterations in women belonging to the Program for the Prevention and Early Detection of Cervical Cancer of Castilla y León, and to identify the most frequent presence and genotype of Human Papilloma Virus (HVP).Material and Methods: A quantitative, observational, descriptive, cross-sectional, retrospective study of women aged 25-64 years who participated in screening tests during 2012 and 2014. The results of conventional cervical cytology were interpreted according with the Bethesda 2001 classification. The detection and genotyping of HPV was performed across PCR. Qualitative variables are described by absolute and relative frequencies (percentages) of their categories, with a 95% confidence interval (CI 95%). To study the association between qualitative variables, the χ2 test was used. The value of p≤0.05 was considered statistically significant.
Results: 190,203 samples of cervical smears were analyzed during the period. 66.4% of the cytological samples showed no lesions or morphological alterations. Of the cytological samples with alterations we identified 7,083 with metaplasia, 2,844 with atypical squamous cells (1.5%), 855 with low grade lesions (0.4%), 255 with high grade lesions (0.13%) and 198 with cancerous lesions%). Low- and high-grade intraepithelial lesions, in addition to carcinomas, were more frequent in HPV positive samples (p ‹0.001). To the vaginal atrophy of perimenopausal women we detected HPV-53 (0.7%), HPV-31 (0.6%) and HPV-58 (0.5%) genotypes. In patients with intraepithelial lesions the most frequent genotype was HPV-16.
Conclusions: the prevalence of HPV is usually higher according to the severity of the cytological lesion detected. The most frequently isolated genotype in high-grade low-grade intraepithelial lesions is HPV-16.