Nov. 20, 2006
HEALTH: Smoking Increases Risk of Cervical Cancer for Some Women
By Lee Bowman
Scripps Howard News Service
Women who smoke and also carry high levels of the virus associated with
cervical cancer are up to 27 times more likely to develop the most
common
form of cervical cancer compared with uninfected women who also smoke,
results of a new study show.
The study by Swedish researchers involved data from Pap tests of more
than
100,000 women, and identified 499 with cervical cancer that had not
extended
beyond the outer layer of tissue. They matched them with 499 other
women who
were similar in age and other characteristics, but cancer-free.
For those women, they compared smoking behavior with concentrations of
human
papilloma virus-16, the strain most associated with cervical cancer,
and
found that the combination caused risk to soar.
"Our study would imply a synergistic action between HPV and smoking
that
would greatly increase the likelihood of women developing cervical
cancer if
they are HPV-positive smokers," said Anthony Gunnell, a medical
biostatistician at Karolinska Institute in Stockholm and lead author of
the
report published Friday in the journal Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers
and
Prevention.
Specifically:
-- Women who smoked and had a high HPV load during their first exam had
27
times greater risk of later cancer than women who smoked but did not
have an
HPV infection.
-- Women who were positive for HPV (no matter how high their viral
load)
were 14 times more likely to develop cervical cancer than women who
were
HPV-negative and smoked.
-- Nonsmoking women with high HPV loads had just six times greater risk
for
cervical cancer compared to non-smokers who were negative for the
virus.
"Clearly, both exposures need to be present at the same time for there
to be
interaction," Gunnell said.
The study may also partly explain why some women may not get cervical
cancer
despite smoking or being HPV-positive, which are both known to
contribute to
the disease on their own.
Government public health authorities in the United States have only
recently
begun recommending a vaccine against HPV for adolescent girls and young
women in an effort to protect them from cervical cancer in the future.
Cervical cancer is one of the leading causes of cancer deaths
worldwide, and
death rates are particularly high in developing countries. In the
United
States, although the rate of incidence and mortality have fallen by 50
percent in the last 20 years, this year alone, of 9,700 diagnosed with
cervical cancer, some 3,700 will die.
Gunnell and colleagues also found a relationship between how long a
woman
had smoked and cancer. "We found a statistically significant
multiplicative
interaction between duration of smoking and HPV presence during
cervical
cancer," he said.
This could be because smoking suppresses the immune system in such a
way
that HPV infection thrives, he said. Or it could be that both the virus
and
smoking suppresses levels of certain antibodies that control abnormal
cell
growth, thus encouraging cancer to spread.
"More likely it is a combination of both mechanisms that increases the
risk," Gunnell said, adding that more research is needed to understand
the
interactions. In the meantime, health care providers should consider
women
smokers with heavy HPV infections at particular risk for cervical
cancer, he
said.
On the Net:www.aacr.org
Reach Lee Bowman at bowmanl@shns.com)