Effect of Pap smear collection and carrageenan on cervicovaginal human papillomavirus-16 infection in a rhesus macaque model

JN Roberts, RC Kines, HA Katki… - Journal of the …, 2011 - academic.oup.com
JN Roberts, RC Kines, HA Katki, DR Lowy, JT Schiller
Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 2011academic.oup.com
Background Human papillomavirus (HPV) infection of the genital mucosa is thought to
require trauma to the cervicovaginal epithelium. Therefore, we determined whether a
cytology specimen collection procedure (Pap smear), which disrupts the epithelium by
design, renders the cervix more susceptible to HPV infection in a primate model. Methods In
a series of female rhesus macaques, a speculum examination was performed with (n= 8) or
without (n= 4) a cytology specimen collection procedure as it is commonly practiced in a …
Background
Human papillomavirus (HPV) infection of the genital mucosa is thought to require trauma to the cervicovaginal epithelium. Therefore, we determined whether a cytology specimen collection procedure (Pap smear), which disrupts the epithelium by design, renders the cervix more susceptible to HPV infection in a primate model.
Methods
In a series of female rhesus macaques, a speculum examination was performed with (n = 8) or without (n = 4) a cytology specimen collection procedure as it is commonly practiced in a gynecology clinic. An internal digital examination was performed after specimen collection using Surgilube (n = 4) or 1% iota-carrageenan, a previously indentified HPV inhibitor (n = 4) as the lubricant. The cervix was then inoculated with HPV16 pseudovirions expressing red fluorescent protein. After 3 days, the reproductive tracts were excised and the cervix was cryosectioned. Sections were analyzed by fluorescent confocal microscopy for the number of red fluorescent protein–positive keratinocytes.
Results
Substantial infection of the ectocervix, the transformation zone, and the endocervix was detected, but only in conjunction with the cytology specimen collection procedure (cytology using Surgilube vs without cytology using Surgilube, mean = 84 infectious events per section vs mean = 0.05 infectious events per section, difference = 84 infectious events per section, 95% confidence interval = 19 to 384 infectious events per section). When the carrageenan gel was substituted for Surgilube for an internal digital examination, the mean number of infectious events decreased (carrageenan gel vs Surgilube, mean = 3.5 events per section vs mean = 84 infectious events per section difference = 81 events per section, 95% confidence interval = 33 to 213 events per section).
Conclusions
These findings indicate that cytology screening in women might lead to a transient enhancement of susceptibility to HPV infection and that use of a carrageenan-based gel during the examination might mitigate this enhancement.
Oxford University Press