HPV-associated 
        Cancer among HIV Positive Men and Women in the Combination ART Era
        
        
          
           
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                  | SUMMARY: 
                    Precancerous 
                    anal cell changes and infection with high-risk human papillomavirus 
                    (HPV) types remain common among men with HIV despite effective 
                    antiretroviral therapy (ART) that suppresses viral load and 
                    restores CD4 cell levels, according to a study presented at 
                    the XVIII International AIDS Conference (AIDS 
                    2010) last month in Vienna. A related study found that 
                    invasive cervical cancer -- also caused by HPV -- was associated 
                    with lower CD4 cell counts among HIV positive women in the 
                    large NA-ACCORD cohort. |  |  |  | 
           
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        By 
          Liz Highleyman 
          
          Human papillomavirus 
          is a common sexually transmitted infection that can cause abnormal cell 
          changes. Several types cause warts, and "high-risk" types 
          including HPV-16 and HPV-18 can cause malignant cell growth, or cancer. 
          While invasive cervical cancer is considered an AIDS-defining illness, 
          anal cancer is not, even though they have the same cause. 
        Anal 
          Cancer in Men
          
          In the first study presented at AIDS 2010, Christopher Piketty and colleagues 
          from the French Valparaiso Study Group aimed to assess the impact of 
          combination ART and 
          immune restoration on HPV-related anal cell abnormalities among men 
          with HIV. 
          
          This longitudinal analysis included 94 HIV positive men who have sex 
          with men (MSM) seen at 7 academic hospitals in France who started combination 
          ART for the first time. The median age was about 40 years. Only 4% had 
          ever had an AIDS diagnosis, but about 20% had a history of other sexually 
          transmitted infections.
        The researchers 
          tested participants for HPV DNA (genetic material), examined anal cells 
          using ThinPrep Pap smears, and looked for tissue abnormalities including 
          squamous intraepithelial lesions (SIL), a precursor of anal cancer. 
          In addition, CD4 and CD8 T-cell responses to the E6 and E7 proteins 
          of HPV-16 were measured in a subgroup of participants who had anal HPV-16 
          infection at study entry.
        Samples 
          were obtained at baseline and at months 12 and 24 after starting ART; 
          12-month data were reported. 
        Results
        
           
            |  | The 
              researchers identified 56 cases of invasive cervical cancer following 
              ART initiation, and matched them with 503 controls. | 
           
            |  | Women 
              with lower CD4 counts were more likely to develop invasive cervical 
              cancer during follow-up. | 
           
            |  | At 
              the time of ART initiation, the mean CD4 count was about 240 cells/mm3 
              in both case and control groups. | 
           
            |  | 4 
              years prior to starting ART, however, the mean CD4 cell count among 
              women who developed invasive cervical cancer was about 160 cells/mm3 
              lower than that of control women, a significant difference. | 
           
            |  | At 
              1 year after ART initiation, average CD4 count was about 40 cells/mm3 
              lower in case women compared with control women, but this difference 
              was not statistically significant. | 
           
            |  | At 
              2 years and 4 years after starting ART, women who developed cervical 
              cancer had CD4 counts about 100 cells/mm3 and 160 cells/mm3 lower 
              than control women, respectively, both of which were significant. | 
           
            |  | Mean 
              CD4 counts of control women increased by an average of 8 cells/mm3 
              more per month than those of women who developed cervical cancer 
              during the year following ART initiation (P < 0.01) | 
           
            |  | HIV 
              viral load was not a significant predictor of cervical cancer. | 
        
        Taken 
          together, the investigators concluded, "the data suggest that combination 
          ART exhibits no effect on the incidence of anal HPV infection, no effect 
          on the incidence of anal SIL, [and] no restoration of anti-HPV T-cell 
          responses."
        These 
          data suggest that HIV-positive MSM remain at risk of anal SIL despite 
          immune restoration, they added, a finding in accordance with several 
          epidemiological studies showing no significant decreases -- or even 
          increases -- in the occurrence of anal cancer among HIV positive men 
          in the ART era.
        The researchers 
          recommended that HIV positive men -- whether on or off ART -- should 
          be screened for anal cancer, much as women receive regular Pap smears 
          or HPV tests to detect early signs of cervical cancer.
        Cervical 
          Cancer in Women
        In the 
          second study, Alison Abraham and fellow investigators with the NA-ACCORD 
          (North American AIDS Cohort Collaboration on Research and Design) study 
          looked at development of invasive cervical cancer -- the most severe 
          stage -- among women with HIV after ART initiation.
          
          Some prior studies have found that while HIV positive women are more 
          likely to have high-risk HPV infection and precancerous cell changes, 
          frank invasive cervical cancer and related death are not significantly 
          more common compared with the general population in high-income countries 
          like the U.S. Researchers have suggested this is likely due to the fact 
          that HIV positive women typically receive regular screening that catches 
          cervical cell changes at an early more treatable stage.
          
          This nested case-control analysis included some 110,000 HIV positive 
          women enrolled in the NA-ACCORD IeDEA database from 13 cohorts in North 
          America who started ART during follow-up. The median age was 40 years, 
          more than half were African-American, and about one-third had a history 
          on injection drug use. 
        Women 
          who developed invasive cervical cancer (cases) were matched to women 
          without invasive cancer (controls) according to age, time of ART initiation, 
          CD4 count, calendar period, cohort, and length of follow-up. The investigators 
          compared trends in average CD4 count at various time points prior to 
          invasive cancer diagnosis, starting 4 years before ART initiation.
        Results
        
           
            |  | CD4 cell count rose from about 300 cells/mm3 at study entry to 500 
              cells/mm3 at month 12. | 
           
            |  | Median 
              viral load fell from 4.8 to 1.6 log and more than 90% achieved undetectable 
              HIV RNA < 50 copies/mL. | 
           
            |  | Overall, 
              anal SIL did not regress despite CD4 cell gains after starting ART. | 
           
            |  | Prevalence 
              of SIL was similar at baseline and at month 12: | 
           
            |  | 
                 
                  |  | Anal 
                    SIL overall: 54% at baseline vs 58% at month 12; |   
                  |  | Low-grade 
                    SIL: 32% vs 34%, respectively; |   
                  |  | High-grade 
                    SIL: 8% vs 14%, respectively. |  | 
           
            |  | Participants 
              continued to show evidence of overall and high-risk HPV infection 
              after ART initiation: | 
           
            |  | 
                 
                  |  | Any 
                    HPV type: 97% at baseline vs 94% at month 12; |   
                  |  | Any 
                    high-risk HPV type: 92% at baseline vs 89% at month 12; |   
                  |  | HPV-16: 
                    40% vs 34%, respectively; |   
                  |  | HPV-18: 
                    18% vs 16%, respectively. |  | 
           
            |  | Both 
              at baseline and at month 12, participants had a median 5 types of 
              HPV overall and a median 3 high-risk types. | 
           
            |  | Among 
              29 participants who started out with normal cytology and histology 
              findings at baseline, 44% progressed to anal SIL at month 12. | 
           
            |  | Conversely, 
              among 41 men with anal SIL at baseline, 49% experienced some degree 
              of SIL regression and 32% achieved normal histology by month 12. | 
           
            |  | Participants 
              also did not clear infection with high-risk HPV-16 despite immune 
              restoration on ART. | 
           
            |  | No 
              significant changes in CD4 or CD8 T-cell responses to HPV were observed. | 
           
            |  | Specific 
              anti-HPV CD4 T-cell responses were mostly undetectable both at baseline 
              and at month 12. | 
        
        Based 
          on these findings, the investigators concluded that in this large North 
          American cohort, "average CD4 counts were consistently lower over 
          time for women who developed invasive cervical cancer than for similar 
          women who remained free of invasive cervical cancer over follow-up."
          
          "These differences in CD4 trajectory between cases and controls 
          suggest a role of long-term immunosuppression," they continued. 
          Less robust CD4 cell recovery following ART was not explained by differences 
          in viral load (suggesting poorer adherence) or prior suboptimal use 
          of NRTIs (suggesting drug resistance).
          
          Investigator affiliations: 
          
          Piketty study: Hopital Européen Georges Pompidou, Paris, France; 
          INSERM U943 - UPMC UMR S943, Paris, France; Hopital Lariboisiere, Paris, 
          France; Hopital Saint Antoine, Paris, France; Hopital de La Pitie-Salpetriere, 
          Paris, France; Hopital Bichat-Claude Bernard, Paris, France.
          
          Abraham study: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Epidemiology, 
          Baltimore, MD; Harvard University, Boston, MA; Centers for Disease Control 
          and Prevention, Atlanta, GA; Yale University, New Haven, CT; University 
          of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC; Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, 
          Baltimore, MD; University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada; University of 
          California at San Francisco, San Francisco, CA; BC Centre for Excellence 
          in HIV/AIDS, Vancouver, Canada; University of Washington, Seattle, WA; 
          McGill University, Montreal, Canada; University of Toronto, Toronto, 
          Canada; Kaiser Permanente Northern California, Oakland, CA.
        8/24/10
        References
        C Piketty, 
          A Si-Mohamed, E Lanoy, and others (Valparaiso Study Group). Lack of 
          regression of anal squamous intraepithelial lesions and anal HPV infections 
          despite immune restoration under cART. XVIII International AIDS Conference 
          (AIDS 2010). Vienna, February 18-23, 2010. Abstract 
          WEAB0103.
        AG Abraham, 
          S Gange, Y Jing, and others (North American AIDS Cohort Collaboration 
          on Research and Design). CD4 count trajectories of HIV infected women 
          in North America with cervical cancer after initiating ART. XVIII International 
          AIDS Conference (AIDS 2010). Vienna, February 18-23, 2010. Abstract 
          WEAB0104.