Abstract
Background Infection with the human papillomavirus (HPV) has been established as a cause of cervical cancer, but the association between a positive test for HPV DNA and the risk of the subsequent development of invasive cervical cancer is unknown. Methods In a study of women who participated in a population-based screening program for cancer of the cervix in Sweden from 1969 to 1995, we compared the proportion of normal cervical smears (Pap smears) that were positive for HPV DNA among 118 women in whom invasive cervical cancer developed an average of 5.6 years later (range, 0.5 month to 26.2 years) with the proportion of HPV DNA–positive smears from 118 women who remained healthy during a similar length of follow-up (controls). The control women were matched for age to the women with cancer, and they had had two normal Pap smears obtained at time points that were similar to the times of the base-line smear and the diagnosis of cancer confirmed by biopsy in the women with cancer. Results At base line, 35 o...
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CITATION STYLE
Wallin, K.-L., Wiklund, F., Ångström, T., Bergman, F., Stendahl, U., Wadell, G., … Dillner, J. (1999). Type-Specific Persistence of Human Papillomavirus DNA before the Development of Invasive Cervical Cancer. New England Journal of Medicine, 341(22), 1633–1638. https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm199911253412201
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