Kansas City,
20
December
2017
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09:15 AM
America/Chicago

Marie Claire: Everything You Need to Know About HPV

Dr. Barbara Pahud, associate director of the Vaccine & Treatment Evaluation Unit at Children’s Mercy Kansas City, provides expert commentary

by Gigi Engle 

This past summer, a 27-year-old public relations executive named Gabby went in for a gynecological exam. She had started seeing a new guy recently, and although both had gotten tested for STIs after their last respective hookups, the usual "what ifs" had started to brew. Bombarded by news of record high STIs, super gonorrhea, and far-reaching herpes diagnoses, the fear that somehow she had contracted something began to consume her.

She reminded herself of her hypochondriac tendencies but booked an appointment anyway. Then, a Pap smear confirmed her worst fears: Gabby was at high risk for HPV. She’d need to return for a biopsy. If the cells proved to be abnormal, they would need to be scraped off her cervix.

"Seventy-nine million Americans are currently infected with HPV."

“I'd previously gotten the HPV vaccine and my current boyfriend had been fully tested, so it seemed odd that I could get HPV,” she tells MarieClaire.com.

Gabby's thinking is logical, but what most women don't realize is that they are at high risk to HPV exposure—whether or not they’ve been vaccinated—simply because of the sheer number of people who have it.

According to the CDC, 79 million Americans are currently infected with HPV and 14 million people become newly infected each year. Additionally, the vaccine doesn’t protect against every strain of HPV, just the ones most likely to cause cancer or genital warts. More than 80 percent of sexually active women will contract one form or another of HPV in their lifetime. “Not only was I in good company, I was in almost universal company,” Gabby says.

So why didn't HPV show up during Gabby or her partner's most recent STI screening? HPV testing doesn’t fall on the regular panel of STIs for which men or women are tested. Women are only tested after a certain age or if a Pap smear comes back abnormal. Men aren’t tested for HPV unless under extreme circumstances. Barring an anal Pap smear, a test for men does not exist.

The problem is: So. many. sexually. active. people. don't. know. any. of. this.

Before the biopsy, Gabby tried to ask her doctor questions, but says she was brushed off. The doctors and nurses at her OB-GYN’s office didn’t explain what the test was like or prepare her for how the biopsy would feel (“more painful than I expected”). No one mentioned that she might bleed for days afterwards or that she could experience persistent cramps the day after the biopsy.

“I asked her what to tell my boyfriend, and she was like, ‘Well, it doesn't affect men so it doesn't matter.’ But when I did my own digging, I found out that isn't true,” she says.

MarieClaire.com spoke to multiple women who went through similar experiences regarding HPV diagnosis, testing, and education (or lack thereof). Myisha, 35, reports that she only discovered her HPV status after experiencing extreme pelvic pain. Allison* says she has had cervical cancer from HPV twice, despite being vaccinated. Melissa* found out she had HPV when she was in college, after she and her boyfriend had both been tested. “The scariest part was not knowing and feeling like I wasn't in control. Anything that falls under the category of STI sounds really scary. I wish I had been more informed beforehand. My doctor was very supportive, but I didn't know the right questions to ask in the moment,” she says.

Here's what you need to know: HPV (Human Papillomavirus is one of the most common STIs and is easily spread through sexual skin-to-skin contact. It can be passed through vaginal sex, anal, or oral sex, and can even be transmitted while kissing, especially French kissing.

Overall, more than 150 known strains of HPV exist. Most strains clear up on their own, but types 16 and 18 cause cell changes that are precursors to cancer. Though HPV is most commonly associated with cervical cancer, the virus can also cause cancer of the vagina, mouth, and throat in women.

There's a common misconception that only women are tested because men are merely carriers of the virus. But that's fake news (yes, actually). While females are at higher risk of developing cancer, about 40 percent of the nearly 40,000 cases of HPV-related cancer each year occur in men. Among these, about 80 percent of cases affect the mouth and throat, while others occur in the anus and penis.

 

What makes HPV different from other STIs is the frequency with which it clears up on its own. Most people with HPV don't show any symptoms or health problems, and 90 percent of cases will go away by themselves within two years of infection, says Barbara Pahud, M.D., the associate director of the Vaccine and Treatment Evaluation Unit at Children’s Mercy Kansas City. That's great news for most men and women. But, for the remaining 10 percent, HPV can cause genital warts, dysplasia (abnormal cells that can lead to cancer), and cancer. While there's no treatment for the virus itself, there are treatments for some of the health problems it can lead to, including genital warts and cervical pre-cancer.

*Names have been changed.

 

Read the full article via Marie Claire.

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