4.7 Article

Shared and Persistent Asymptomatic Cutaneous Human Papillomavirus Infections in Healthy Skin

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL VIROLOGY
Volume 81, Issue 8, Pages 1444-1449

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jmv.21529

Keywords

HPV; asymptomatic infection; healthy skin; persistent infection

Categories

Funding

  1. Cancer Council Queensland [455965]
  2. SSMF
  3. University of Queensland

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Cutaneous human papillomavirus (HPV) types are commonly found in normal skin, and some of them have been suspected to play a role in the development of non-melanoma skin cancer. This present study is divided into three sections, the aims of this study were to examine if certain HPV-types persist overtime and if HPV-types are shared within families. From the first part of the study, swab samples from foreheads were collected for three longitudinal studies from one family with a newborn baby. Five specific HPV-types were isolated from the family with a newborn, with HPV-5 and FA67 being found at various time points and prevalence rates in all four members of the family. Part 2 consisted of a followed up study from two families with a 6 years interval. Six of the family members were found to have at least one of the HPV-types identified in the family 6 years earlier. Many of the HPV-types identified were shared within the families studied. Part 3 of this study involved weekly samples from four healthy females for 4 months. Among the four healthy individuals, 11%, 65%, and 56% of the weekly samples were HPV-DNA positive with one individual HPV-negative. All specimens were tested for HPV-DNA by PCR using the broad range HPV-type primer pair FAP59/64. The positive samples were HPV-type determined by cloning and sequencing. Specific cutaneous HPV-types persist over long periods of time in healthy skin in most individuals investigated and certain HPVs are shared between family members. J. Med. Virol. 81:1444-1449, 2009. (C) 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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