Co-carcinogenesis: Human papillomaviruses, coal tar derivatives, and squamous cell cervical cancer

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Abstract

Cervical cancer (CC) is the fourth most common cancers among women worldwide. Human papillomaviruses (HPVs) play a major role in the etiology of CC, with several lines of epidemiologic and experimental evidence supporting a role for non-viral (co-carcinogens) and host genetic factors in controlling the risk for progression to neoplasia among HPV-infected individuals. The role of co-carcinogens in the development of CC is significant in the developing world where poor sanitation and other socio-economic conditions increase the infectious cancer burden. Here, we discuss how exposure to environmental factors such as coal tar derivatives from cigarette smoking, tar-based sanitary products, and inhaled smoke from biomass-burning stoves, could activate host pathways involved in development of HPV-associated squamous cell cancers in resource-limited settings. Understanding interactions between these pathways with certain oncogenic HPV genotypes may guide implementation of strategies for control and treatment of HPV-associated cancers that develop in populations at high risk of exposure to various co-carcinogens.

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Haverkos, H. W., Haverkos, G. P., & O’Mara, M. (2017). Co-carcinogenesis: Human papillomaviruses, coal tar derivatives, and squamous cell cervical cancer. Frontiers in Microbiology, 8(NOV). https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2017.02253

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