The Oklahoman

1 in 4 US men have infection linked to cancers

- BY LINDSEY TANNER

CHICAGO — The first national estimate suggests that nearly half of U.S. men have genital infections caused by a sexually transmitte­d virus and that 1 in 4 has strains linked with several cancers.

Most human papillomav­irus infections cause no symptoms and most disappear without treatment. And most adults will get an HPV infection at some point in their lives.

But high-risk HPV can cause cancer in the mouth and upper throat, cervical cancer in women and other cancers. Less harmful strains can cause genital warts.

Vaccines can prevent infections but experts say vaccinatio­n rates in preteens and young adults are too low. High-risk HPV poses cancer risks to people who are infected and to their sexual partners, who can catch HPV even when the infections are silent.

The study “just underscore­s that you need to vaccinate boys as well as girls,” said Debbie Saslow, an HPV specialist at the American Cancer Society.

The new estimate comes from an analysis of a 2013-14 national health survey; nearly 2,000 men aged 18 to 59 were tested for HPV. Results were published Thursday in the journal JAMA Oncology. The researcher­s say it’s the first published estimate for genital HPV infections in men. The 45 percent rate is higher than previously reported rates for women, said Dr. Jasmine Han, the lead author and a cancer specialist at Womack Army Medical Center at Fort Bragg, North Carolina.

HPV virus can also be found in the mouth at much lower rates in men and women. The new study involved only genital HPV.

The new estimate provides a good baseline for measuring the effectiven­ess of HPV vaccinatio­ns in boys and young men, said Saslow. Routine vaccinatio­n was recommende­d for pre-teen boys and young men in 2011, five years after approval for girls. Few men in the new study had been vaccinated.

Before the government eased recommenda­tions last October, fewer than one-third of 13-yearold girls and boys were fully vaccinated. Now they need only two doses instead of three.

 ?? [THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] ?? A doctor holds a vial of the human papillomav­irus (HPV) vaccine Gardasil on Aug. 28, 2006, in his Chicago office.
[THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] A doctor holds a vial of the human papillomav­irus (HPV) vaccine Gardasil on Aug. 28, 2006, in his Chicago office.

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