NEW YORK – Cancer of the back of the mouth and throat is on the rise, primarily because of more cases stemming from a viral infection called human papillomavirus (HPV), according to a US study.
The number of people who were diagnosed with HPV-related oral cancer in 2004 was triple the number diagnosed in 1988 – due largely, researchers suspect, to changes in sexual behaviour that have helped spread the virus.
HPV is a very common sexually transmitted infection that can cause genital warts and certain cancers, including of the cervix, anus and penis.
"The whole relationship between HPV-related head and neck cancer completely changes our ideas of who is at risk, how to treat the cancer, the prognostics of the cancer, and prevention," said Maura Gillison, at the Ohio State University, who led the study, published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.
Dr Gillison and her colleagues examined oral cancer tissue collected from 271 patients over a 20-year period.
The type of cancer they examined, called oropharyngeal, originates in the back of the tongue, the soft part of the roof of the mouth, the tonsils, or the side of the throat.
They checked the samples for evidence of HPV infection and found that the HPV-related cases became more and more common each decade, while those samples that did not test positive for the virus became less common.
From these results, they estimate that HPV-related oral cancers afflict 26 out of every million people in the United States, compared with eight out of every million people in 1988.
Tina Dalianis, a professor at the Karolinska Institute in Sweden who did not take part in the study, said she believed the increase in oral cancers were due to an HPV epidemic. “We believe sexual habits have changed, and that there is an increase in sexual activity earlier on in life, with an exchange of many more sex partners in general,” she wrote.
The current study confirms what Dr Dalianis had found previously in Sweden – that HPV-related oral cancers were becoming the dominant form of the disease.
Previously, tobacco had been the primary cause of oral cancer, and most oral cancer cases were HPV-negative.
Dr Gillison’s group found that HPV-negative cancers have been cut in half since the 1980s. HPV-positive cases, which had made up just 16 per cent of oral cancer cases in the 1980s, comprised more than 70 per cent in the 2000s. – (Reuters)