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Effectiveness of physically ablative and pharmacological treatments for anal condyloma in HIV-infected men
Author(s) -
Sandra Vela,
Sebastián Videla,
Arelly Ornelas,
Boris Revollo,
Bonaventura Clotet,
Guillem Sirera,
Marta Piñol,
Francesc García Cuyàs
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0199033
Subject(s) - medicine , imiquimod , electrosurgery , anal cancer , anal canal , retrospective cohort study , hpv infection , genital warts , surgery , human papillomavirus , dermatology , cervical cancer , cancer , rectum
Background There is limited information on the effectiveness of available treatments for anal condyloma acuminata in HIV-1-infected men. Aim To provide data on the effectiveness of electrosurgical excision, infrared coagulation and pharmacological (imiquimod) treatments for anal condyloma acuminata (peri-anal and/or intra-anal) in HIV-1-infected men based on authors’ practice. Methods Single-center, retrospective descriptive analysis of HIV-1-infected men, 18 years or older treated for anal condyloma acuminata. Standard treatments were offered: electrosurgery excision, infrared coagulation and topical imiquimod. Effectiveness was evaluated by the recurrence rate at 1 year after treatment. Recurrence was defined as any anal condyloma acuminata diagnosed after 3 months of condyloma-free survival post-treatment. Anal cytology and human-papillomavirus-infection (HPV) was assessed. Results Between January 2005 and May 2009, 101 men were treated for anal condyloma acuminata: 65 (64%) with electrosurgery, 27 (27%) with infrared coagulation and 9 (9%) with imiquimod. At 1 year after treatment, the cumulative recurrence rate was 8% (4/65, 95%CI: 2–15%) with electrosurgery excision, 11% (3/27, 95%CI: 4–28%) with infrared coagulation and 11% (1/9, 95%CI: 2–44%) with imiquimod treatment. No predictive factors were associated with recurrence. Anal HPV-6 or HPV-11 was detectable in 98 (97%) patients and all had high-risk HPV genotypes, and 89 (88%) patients had abnormal anal canal cytology. Limitations: this was a retrospective descriptive analysis; limited to a single center; it cannot know if the recurrence is related to new infection. Conclusion Recurrence of anal condyloma after any treatment was common. Abnormal anal cytology and high-risk HPV-infection were highly prevalent in this population, therefore at high-risk of anal cancer, and warrants careful follow-up.

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