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1. Cervical and Anal Dysplasia in HIV Infected Individuals Jeff Logan, PA-C
2. Anogenital Human Papilloma Virus
3. The Role of HPV in the Development of Cervical and Anal Dysplasia HPV infection is causally associated with cervical cancer and probably other anogenital squamous cell cancers (e.g., anal, penile, vulvar, vaginal)
Over 99% of cervical cancers have HPV DNA detected within the tumor
Persistent infection with a high-risk HPV type is necessary but not sufficient for the development of cervical cancer
4. HPV Papillomaviridae
Double-stranded DNA virus that belongs to the Papovaviridae family
No envelope, icosahedral capsid
55 nm
Anogenital HPV is the most common STD
Most anogenital HPV infections are transient, asymptomatic, and have no clinical consequences
5. HPV Types HPV types identified by nucleic acid sequence homology (not by serology)
Over 100 HPV types identified
Anogenital types have specific tropism (affinity) for anogenital skin and mucosa
More than 30 types affect the anogenital area
6. HPV Types (cont) Anogenital HPV types are divided into 2 groups based on their association with cervical cancer
Low-risk types associated with anogenital warts and mild Pap test abnormalities
High-risk types associated with mild to severe Pap test abnormalities and cervical cancer, and possibly other anogenital cancers (anus, penis, vulva, etc.)
7. HPV Types (cont) Most visible anogenital warts caused by HPV types 6 and 11
Recurrent respiratory papillomatosis associated with HPV types 6 and 11
HPV types 16 and 18 found in up to 70% of anogenital cancers
8. Anogenital HPV Types
9. Clinical Manifestations of HPV In most cases, anogenital HPV infection is transient and has no clinical manifestations or sequelae
Clinical manifestations of genital HPV infection include:
Anogenital warts
Anogenital dysplasia
Squamous cell cancers
Others
10. Penile Warts
11. Vulvar Warts
12. Perianal Warts
13. Oral Warts
14. Cervical Warts
15. Intrameatal Wart
16. Transmission of HPV Predominantly associated with sexual activity
Can occur from asymptomatic and subclinical patients
Probably requires microtrauma to skin/mucous membranes
Role of fomite transmission never documented
17. Transmission of HPV (cont) Incubation period unclear, probably 3 weeks to 20 months
Prior HPV infection at other sites does not appear to offer protection
Autoinnoculation can occur
Vertical transmission may very rarely result in recurrent respiratory papillomatosis in infants and young children
Infectivity after treatment of anogenital warts or cervical cell abnormalities is unknown
18. Transmission of HPV
Recurrences usually are not re-infection.
Transmission risk to current and future partners is unclear
Current partners likely infected at time of diagnosis
Value of disclosing a past diagnosis of genital HPV infection to future partners is unclear, although candid discussions about past STD should be encouraged
19. Natural History of HPV HPV infects stratified squamous epithelium and stimulates cellular proliferation
Affected cells display a broad spectrum of changes ranging from benign hyperplasia to dysplasia to invasive carcinoma
The median duration of new cervical infections is 8 months but varies by type
Gradual development of an effective immune response is the likely mechanism for HPV DNA clearance
20. Natural History of HPV (cont)
Infection with multiple types is common
HPV infection is usually benign
Clinical manifestations of HPV infection can spontaneously regress
Most women infected with high-risk HPV types have no Pap test abnormalities and do not develop cervical cancer
21. Natural History of HPV (cont) Persistent infection is infection that is not cleared by the immune system and is characterized by persistently detectable HPV DNA
HPV infection that persists is the most important factor for precancerous cervical cell changes and cervical cancer
The rate of persistent infection is higher in HIV+ individuals
22. Epidemiology of HPV True incidence/prevalence difficult to define
Incidence estimated to be 6.2 million/year for genital HPV infection in U.S.
Estimated 20 million people currently have a detectable genital HPV infection in U.S.
Estimated $1.6 billion spent annually in direct medical costs to treat symptoms of anogenital HPV infection
23. Question What is the estimated lifetime risk of genital HPV infection for a sexually active adult?
10%
25%
40%
50%
24. Question What is the estimated lifetime risk of genital HPV infection for a sexually active adult?
10%
25%
40%
50% (correct answer)
25. Epidemiology of HPV (cont) 50% of sexually active people in the U.S. will acquire anogenital HPV at some point in their lives
Greater than 75% of sexually active people age 15-45 will acquire HPV
Estimated 1.4 million are affected with anogenital warts at any one time
26. Epidemiology of HPV (cont) Incidence of cervical cancer is estimated at 8.3/100,000
Rates of cervical cancer have fallen by approximately 75% since the introduction of Pap screening programs
27. Risk Factors for Women Young age
Sexual history
Sexual history of male sex partners
HIV infection
28. Risk Factors for Men Greater lifetime number of sex partners
Greater number of recent sex partners
Being uncircumcised
HIV infection
29. Question How is the diagnosis of external genital warts usually made?
Visual inspection
Biopsy
Acetic acid evaluation
HPV DNA test
30. Question How is the diagnosis of external genital warts usually made?
Visual inspection (correct answer)
Biopsy
Acetic acid evaluation
HPV DNA test
31. Diagnosis of HPV Genital warts usually diagnosed by visual inspection
Biopsy for atypical cases
No feasible system for viral culture or serologic testing
32. Diagnosis of HPV (cont) Cervical or anal lesions detected by Pap smear
Acetic acid evaluation may be used with Pap smears or more often with colposcopy or anoscopy
HPV DNA detection commercially available
33. Prevention of HPV ABC
While the effect of condoms in preventing HPV infection is unknown, condom use has been associated with lower rates of genital warts and cervical cancer, both HPV-associated diseases
HPV infections can occur in male and female genital areas that are not covered by a latex condom, as well as in areas that are covered
35. HPV Vaccine Gardasil vaccine approved by FDA in June 2006
Targets HPV types 6, 11, 16 and 18
Approved for use in females aged 9-26
Administered in 3 injections over six months
Cost is $360 for all three doses
36. HPV Vaccine (cont) Does not eliminate the need for pap tests
Does not prevent disease in individuals already infected
Not approved for use in males
Cervarix targets HPV types 16 and 18 only
37. Squamous Intraepithelial Neoplasia (SIL)
38. Squamous Intraepithelial Neoplasia A synonym for dysplasia/CIN (cervical intraepithelial neoplasia)
Categorized as
low-grade SIL (LSIL)--HPV-associated changes, CIN 1
high-grade SIL (HSIL)--CIN 2/3, CIS
Can involve anus (AIN), vulva (VIN), vagina (VaIN), penis (PIN) as well as cervix
41. Cervical Cell Abnormalities Usually subclinical
Detected by Pap test, colposcopy, or biopsy
Usually caused by high-risk HPV types
Most of the time high-risk HPV types do not cause any abnormalities
Most women infected with high-risk HPV types have normal Pap test results
Often regress spontaneously without treatment
42. Classification of Pap Abnormalities 2001 Bethesda System
Atypical squamous cells (ASC) are cells that do not appear to be completely normal
ASC–US—atypical squamous cells of undetermined significance. Sometimes the changes are related to HPV infection. ASC–US changes are usually mild abnormalities.
ASC–H—atypical squamous cells cannot exclude a high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion. ASC–H changes are more likely to be precancerous abnormalities.
43. Classification of Cervical Cell Abnormalities (cont) Low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion (LSIL)--generally a transient infection with a high-risk HPV type
High-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion (HSIL)--generally a persistent infection with a high-risk HPV type with a higher risk for progression to cervical cancer
44. Cervical Dysplasia
45. Cervical Dysplasia
46. Diagnosis of Cervical Cell Abnormalities Cytology (Pap test)
Useful screening test to detect cervical dysplasia (not HPV per se)
Provides indirect evidence of HPV because it detects squamous epithelial cell changes that are almost always due to HPV
47. Liquid-Based Cytology More expensive than conventional Pap
Improves detection of pre-invasive lesions
Reduces # of unsatisfactory Paps due to inflammation, poor fixation, etc.
May be more cost effective because fewer repeat Paps needed
HPV typing can be done on the same sample if indicated
Separate swab must be sent to do typing with conventional Pap
48. Diagnosis of Cervical Cell Abnormalities (cont) Nucleic acid testing
FDA-approved for two optional uses:
To triage women with atypical cells of undetermined significance (ASC-US) Pap test results
As an adjunct to the Pap test to screen for cervical cancer in women 30 years or older
Use of HPV DNA testing for women with SIL Pap test results is unnecessary because the vast majority of women with SIL are infected with HPV
49. Diagnosis of Cervical Cell Abnormalities (cont) Indication for colposcopy is guided by physical exam or Pap test findings with or without HPV DNA test findings
Indications for cervical biopsy include:
Visible exophytic lesions on the cervix
Pap test with HSIL
Pap test with ASC-H or LSIL with colposcopic abnormalities
50. Triage For Cervical Pap Results
51. Cervical Cancer Screening The key strategy to prevent cervical cancer is regular Pap test screening for all sexually active women
New technologies may offer potential advantages over conventional Pap testing
Several organizations provide guidelines for cervical cancer screening, including:
The American Cancer Society
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists
The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force
52. Delay Adjusted Incidence and U.S. Death Rates of Cervical Cancer by Year of Diagnosis and Race: 1973-2001
53. Cervical Cancer Screening Guidelines
54. Cervical Cancer Screening Guidelines
55. Cervical Cancer Screening Guidelines
56. Cervical Cancer Screening Guidelines
57. Pap Test Screening in Immunodeficient Patients Immunodeficiency appears to accelerate intraepithelial neoplasia and invasive cancer
Provide cervical Pap test screening every 6 months for 1 year, then annually for all HIV-infected women with or without genital warts
Anal pap tests and anoscopy: value in absence of symptoms not established, but is under investigation
58. Treatment of Cervical Cellular Abnormalities For more information on managing women with cervical cell abnormalities, refer to:
CDC National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program http://www.cdc.gov/cancer/nbccedp/index.htm
2001 Consensus Guidelines for the Management of Women with Cervical Cytologic Abnormalities http://www.asccp.org/consensus/cytological.shtml
59. Resources National HPV and Cervical Cancer Prevention Resource Center, created by the American Social Health Association
http://www.ashastd.org/hpvccrc/
CDC Cervical Cancer Screening Fact Sheet http://www.cdc.gov/cancer/nbccedp/cc_basic.htm
National Cancer Institute Cervical Cancer Screening Information For Patients http://www.nci.nih.gov/cancerinfo/pdq/screening/cervical/patient/
American Society of Colposcopy and Cervical Cancer Pathology http://www.asccp.org/pdfs/patient_edu/women_should_know.pdf
60. Anal HPV Infection
61. Overcoming Anophobia Dr. Seymore Butts
62. Anal Problems Benign anal conditions highly prevalent in the general population
1.5 million anorectal preparations dispensed by prescription each year in US
80% of US population with anal symptoms self-medicate Janicke 1996, Nagle 1996, Nelson 1995
63. Common Anal Conditions Fissure
Fistula
Erosions
Hemorrhoids
Hypertrophic papillae
Bacterial infection
Herpes, herpes, herpes
64. Manifestations of Anal HPV No sequellae
Warts
Friable tissue
Anal dysplasia (AIN)
Anal cancer
65. Anal and Perianal Warts Cosmetic concerns
Hygiene problems
Impact sexual function
Pain, bleeding, itch
Incontinence of stool
66. Differential Diagnosis of Anal Papules and Nodules Fibroepitheliomas
Redundant tissue
Cysts
Comedones
Hemorrhoids
Nodular herpes
Condylomata lata
78. Incidence of Anal Cancer, All Men and Women Aged 40-64,San Francisco County 1973-1999
79. Relative Risk of Anal Cancer in U.S. AIDS-Cancer Registry Match Study
81. Anal and Cervical HPV Infection in Women
83. Baseline Anal Cytology Among HIV-Positive and HIV-Negative Women
84. Four-Year Incidence of Anal HSIL
85. Effect of HAART on HPV-Related Disease
Modest or no effect on cervical pathology
No effect on anal pathology
Risk of anal cancer is likely to increase over time
86. Anal SIL No study has proven that anal HSIL leads to anal cancer, but …
Anal cancer is often found with overlying HSIL
Cervical HSIL is a known precursor to cervical cancer
It is not clear if HIV+ men/women with anal SIL progress to anal cancer faster than HIV- men/women with anal SIL
87. Cervical and Anal Cancer Incidence Cervical cancer prior to cervical cytology screening: 40-50/100,000
Cervical cancer currently: 8/100,000
Anal cancer currently: 1/100,000
Anal cancer among HIV- MSM:
13-35/100,000 Martin, Bower. Sex Trans Inf 77 (2001) 237-31
Anal cancer may be twice as high among HIV+ MSM vs. HIV- MSM: (?70/100,000)
Frisch, Biggar, Goedert. J Natl Cancer Inst 92 (2000) 1500-10
88. Anal Cancer Anal cancer is a growingclinical problem in the HIV+ population
It is not known if screening by anal Pap and HRA decrease the incidence of anal cancer and prolong survival
Smoking is a known risk factor for anal cancer
90. Anal Cancer in ID/AIDS Clinic at Denver Public Health New diagnoses of invasive anal cancer increased from 0/year 1995-7 to 1/year 1998-2000 and 3.3/year 2001-3 in this HIV-positive population
Because of this an anal Pap screening program was instituted
To date 121 (119 men and 2 women) screened, with 117 (97%) satisfactory for evaluation
91. Invasive Anal Cancer Rates in Denver Health ID Clinic Patients
0 Cases per year from 1995-7
1 Cases per year from 1998-2000
3.3 Cases per year from 2001-3
92. Readings on Anal Paps 15% normal (n = 17)
4% ASC-US (n = 5)
69% LSIL (n = 81)
12% HSIL (n = 14)
Total of 85% abnormal (n = 100)
93. Anal Cytology (Pap Smear) Atypical squamous cells – undetermined significance (ASC-US)
Atypical squamous cells – cannot rule out HSIL (ASC-H)
Low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions (LSIL)
Mild dysplasia and condyloma
High-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions (HSIL)
Moderate and severe dysplasia
Anal Cancer
94. Some Notes on Anal Pap Smears Conventional pap smears may be as reliable as the liquid-fixative technique
Grade of dysplasia found on anal pap smear does not correlate as well with grade of dysplasia found on biopsy
ASCUS should be followed up with biopsy, unlike with ASCUS found on cervical pap smear
95. Anal Pap Screening Guidelines All MSM (men who have sex with men),
regardless of HIV status
(? women with history of anal intercourse)
Women with cervical cancer or high-grade
vulvar disease
All HIV-positive men and women, regardless of route of transmission
Transplant recipients (immunocompromised)
96. High Resolution AnoscopyHRA Disposable plastic anoscope with plunger
Colposcope (light source, magnification, image capture)
such as Zeiss FC 150 (with built-in digital camera)
Lubricant, 3% acetic acid, Lugol’s iodine
Baby Tischler or other small forceps (eg, laryngeal biopsy forceps), formalin
97. HRA Procedure Identify transformation zone
[epithelial columnar junction]
Identify areas of aceto-whitening
If needed, identify areas that are Lugol’s NEGATIVE (light yellow to white)
Biopsy suspicious areas
98. Anal Histopathology Atypical/HPV changes
Anal Intraepithelial Neoplasia (AIN)
AIN I/mild dysplasia
AIN II/moderate dysplasia
AIN III/severe dysplasia
Squamous Cell Carcinoma In-Situ (SCCIC)
Microinvasive SCC (anal cancer)
99. Anal Histopathology (cont) There is no clinical distinction between AIN-III and squamous cell carcinoma in-situ (SCCIS)
Don’t tell patients with SCCIS they have cancer
The rate of SCCIS progression to invasive SCC is uncertain (<1%-5% per year in HIV+ patients with HSIL)
106. Normal Anorectal Transformation Zone 1
107. Condyloma / LSIL 1
108. HRA: Applying 3% Acetic Acid 1 Normal epithelium 2 Condylomas 3 Thick acetowhite flat HSIL plaque in transition zone
109. HRA: Applying Lugol’s Iodine Mahogany/black (strongly Lugol’s positive): Normal tissue
Dark yellow (weakly Lugol’s positive): LSIL
Light yellow/white (Lugol’s negative): HSIL
111. HRA Results 61/100 abnormal anal Paps have gone to anoscopy so far
18% no AIN (n = 11)
29% AIN 1 (n = 18)
28% AIN 2 (n = 17)
25% AIN 3 (n = 15)
112. Anal Dysplasia in ID/AIDS Clinic High grade dysplasia (AIN II or III) was found in 52% of those evaluated with anoscopy to date
Best treatment is unclear at this time, as destructive modalities less well tolerated in the anal canal than on the cervix
117. Treatment Options for Anal SCC Surgical excision
Radiation
Chemotherapy