Original contributionBiologic characteristics of specific human papillomavirus types predicted from morphology of cervical lesions☆
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Cited by (40)
Disparities in Cervical Cancer Incidence and Mortality: Can Epigenetics Contribute to Eliminating Disparities?
2017, Advances in Cancer ResearchCitation Excerpt :The established cofactors are cigarette smoking, higher parity, long duration of hormonal contraceptive use, and poor adherence to recommended screening. It is generally agreed that infection with sexually transmitted human papillomavirus (HPV) is a necessary but not sufficient cause of CIN2 + (Becker et al., 1991; Bosch et al., 1993; Coker et al., 1993; Kadish et al., 1992; Koutsky et al., 1992; Levine et al., 1993; Morrison et al., 1991; Schiff et al., 2000; van den Brule et al., 1992; Wallboomers et al., 1999). Of the more than 200 HPV genotypes, less than 40 harbor in the genital tract, and are categorized as high-risk, intermediate-risk, or low-risk HPV genotypes, depending on the magnitude of their association with squamous cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix.
The significance of marked nuclear atypia in grade 1 cervical intraepithelial neoplasia
2009, Human PathologyCitation Excerpt :Whether there is an upper limit of atypia that is allowable in a putative CIN 1, and what the precise limit is, remains unclear. Unusually enlarged cells, referred to as “meganuclei,” have been correlated with HR HPV infection by some authors, without analysis of their follow-up implications [26,27]. Deligdisch et al [28] reported that the squamous intraepithelial lesions in adolescents and young adults displayed “epithelial cells with large hyperchromatic, often bizarre-shaped, nuclei” with a substantially higher frequency than lesions in older women, which the authors speculated “probably represent a primary abundant productive viral infection” in the former.
Vaccines against the human papillomavirus
2006, Progresos en Obstetricia y GinecologiaNew developments in our understanding of the aetiology and pathology of cervical neoplasia
2001, Reviews in Gynaecological PracticeValue of morphological criteria in diagnosing cervical HPV lesions confirmed by in situ hybridization and hybrid capture assay
2001, Pathology Research and Practice
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Supported in part by grants from the National Institutes of Health no. 1-R01-CA47630, 5-P30-CA13330 and training grant no. CA-09173 (D.B.R. and B.K.B.), and a grant from the Brookdale Foundation. Dr Burk was the recipient of a Faculty Research Award from the American Cancer Society.