Open Access
Human Papillomavirus Genotypes and its Prevalence in Normal Population
Author(s) -
Tofan Widya Utami,
Andrijono Andrijono,
Laila Nuranna,
Darrell Fernando,
Alexander Peters,
Gert Jan Fleuren,
Ekaterina S. Jordanova,
Sigit Purbadi
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
indonesian journal of obstetrics and gynecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2338-7335
pISSN - 2338-6401
DOI - 10.32771/inajog.v2i4.410
Subject(s) - hpv infection , medicine , genotype , human papillomavirus , population , virology , cervical cancer , biology , cancer , genetics , gene , environmental health
Objective: Over 200 types of human papillomavirus (HPV) have
been recognized on the basis of DNA sequence. Multiple infection is
more prone to be persistent than single infection. The purpose of
this study is to assess the variation of HPV types and their prevalence
among negative VIA as normal population in Indonesian women.
Method: We processed cervical swabs from 1,214 patients with
negative VIA. HPV DNA and its genotypes were detected using PCR
based INNO-Lipa HPV DNA test. We also classified whether each infection is single or multiple.
Result: From 1,214 women with negative VIA, 39 (3.21%) samples
were positive for HPV DNA. Among them, we detected 19 types of
HPV, consisting of 13 types of high-risk HPV, 5 types of low-risk HPV,
and 1 type of unknown HPV (type X). The most prevalent type was
HPV type 52 (18.31%), followed by type 39 and X with the same proportion (9.86%), and HPV type 16, 18, and 74 (each 8.45%). Of the total 39 HPV-positive samples, 17 (43.6%) showed multiple-type infection and 22 (56.4%) showed single-type infection. The majority
of single infection involves high-risk-HPV. The remaining were type
6, 44, 18, 51 and 66, with each single-type infection showing a prevalence of 4.54%.
Conclusion: Our study shows that single HPV infection among the
negative VIA population are dominated by high-risk type HPV (types
52, 39, 16, and 18). Single infection was more often encountered
than multiple infection.
[Indones J Obstet Gynecol 2014; 4: 211-215]
Keywords: HPV DNA, HPV genotypes, multiple infection, negative
VIA, single infection