Papillomavirus infection in rural women in southern India

Silvia Franceschi(Centre International de Recherche sur le Cancer), Rajamanickam Rajkumar(Social Service Sericulture Project Trust), Peter J.F. Snijders, A Arslan(Centre International de Recherche sur le Cancer), C Mahé(Centre International de Recherche sur le Cancer), Martyn Plummer(Centre International de Recherche sur le Cancer), R Sankaranarayanan(Centre International de Recherche sur le Cancer), Jacob Cherian(Social Service Sericulture Project Trust), Chris J.L.M. Meijer, Elisabete Weiderpass(Karolinska Institutet)
British Journal of Cancer
January 25, 2005
Cited by 162Open Access
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Abstract

To investigate the prevalence of, and the risk factors for, cervical infection with 44 types of human papillomavirus (HPV) in a rural area in the Dindigul District, Tamil Nadu, India, we interviewed and obtained cervical cell samples from 1891 married women aged 16-59 years. HPV prevalence was 16.9% overall and 14.0% among women without cervical abnormalities, or 17.7 and 15.2%, respectively, age-standardised to the world standard population. In all, 21.9% of infections involved more than one HPV type. High-risk HPV types predominated, particularly HPV 16 (22.5% of women infected), followed by HPV 56, HPV 31, HPV 33 and HPV 18. Unlike most populations studied in developed countries, HPV prevalence was constant across the age groups. HPV positivity was inversely associated with education level (odds ratio (OR) among women with high school vs no education=0.6) and positively associated with widowhood and divorce (OR=1.7), nulligravidity (OR=2.3), and condom use (OR=2.6). It is unclear how much low clearance of, or frequent reinfection with HPV accounted for the study prevalence of infection in different age groups.


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