Acquisition, prevalence and clearance of type-specific human papillomavirus infections in young sexually active Indian women: A community-based multicentric cohort study

Author:

Muwonge Richard,Basu ParthaORCID,Gheit Tarik,Anantharaman Devasena,Verma Yogesh,Bhatla Neerja,Joshi Smita,Esmy Pulikottil O.,Poli Usha Rani ReddyORCID,Shah Anand,Zomawia Eric,Shastri Surendra S.,Pimple Sharmila,Prabhu Priya R.,Hingmire Sanjay,Chiwate Aruna,Sauvaget Catherine,Lucas Eric,Malvi Sylla G.,Siddiqi Maqsood,Sankaran Subha,Kannan Thiraviam Pillai Rameshwari Ammal,Varghese Rintu,Divate Uma,Vashist Shachi,Mishra Gauravi,Jadhav Radhika,Tommasino Massimo,Pillai M. Radhakrishna,Sankaranarayanan Rengaswamy,Jayant Kasturi,

Abstract

In context of the ongoing multi-centric HPV vaccine study in India, unvaccinated married women (N = 1484) aged 18–23 years were recruited in 2012–2015 as age-matched controls to the vaccinated women and followed up yearly. We assess type-specific prevalence, natural history and potential determinants of human papillomavirus (HPV) infection in these unvaccinated women. Cervical samples were collected yearly for at least four consecutive years. A Multiplex Type-Specific E7-Based polymerase chain reaction assay was used to detect 21 HPV types. HPV prevalence was 36.4% during 6 years. Most common HPV types were 16 (6.5%) and 31 (6.1%). Highest persistence were observed for HPV 35 (62.5%) and 52 (25%). New HPV acquisition rate was 5.6/1000 person-months of observation (PMO), highest for HPV 16 (1.1/1000 PMO). Type-specific clearance rates ranged between 2.9–5.5/100 PMO. HPV 16 and/or 18 infections were 41% (95% CI 4–63%) lower among women with 2-<3 years between marriage and first cervical sample collection compared to those with <2 years. HPV prevalence and acquisition rates in young Indian women were lower than their Western counterparts. HPV 16 infections being most common shows the importance and potential impact of HPV vaccination in India. Women with 2–3 years exposure had reduced risk possibly due to higher infections clearance.

Funder

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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