IMR Press / EJGO / Volume 26 / Issue 1 / pii/2005106

European Journal of Gynaecological Oncology (EJGO) is published by IMR Press from Volume 40 Issue 1 (2019). Previous articles were published by another publisher on a subscription basis, and they are hosted by IMR Press on imrpress.com as a courtesy and upon agreement with S.O.G.

Original Research

Human papillomavirus infection in relation to mild dyskaryosis in conventional cervical cytology

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1 Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University Medical Centre Ljubljana, Slovenia
2 Institute of Microbiology and Immunology, Medical Facolty, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia
Eur. J. Gynaecol. Oncol. 2005, 26(1), 39–42;
Published: 10 February 2005
Abstract

Purpose of investigation: To establish the prevalence and distribution of high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) genotypes in Slovene women with repeat mild dyskaryosis, and to evaluate three molecular methods for the detection of HPV that could be used as a complementary method to cervical cytology.

Methods: In this prospective study 148 women with three subsequent cervical cytologic tests within two years showing mild dyskaryosis were enrolled. HPV infection was determined using three molecular tests: Hybrid Capture II and two variants of poly­merase chain reaction (PCR-PGMYl 1/PGMY09 and PCR-CPUCPIIG). Results: HPV was detected in 17 of the 45 women aged :5 30 years and in 21 of the 103 women aged > 30 years (37.8% vs 20.4%, p = 0.04). The most common genotype was HPV 16 detected in eight (21.1 %) women, the next were HPV 53 and HPV 51, each detected in five (13.2 %) women. The three molecular methods matched in 92.9%. Conclusion: Low prevalence of HPV infections indicates that cervical screening programmes in Slovenia are overburdened with mild dyskaryosis. Repeat cytology is not reliable; HPV testing might be useful as a complementary method.

Keywords
Human papillomavirus
Mild dyskaryosis
Cervical cancer
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