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Rome consensus conference - statement; human papilloma virus diseases in males

BACKGROUND: Human Papillomavirus (HPV) is a very resistant, ubiquitous virus that can survive in the environment without a host. The decision to analyse HPV-related diseases in males was due to the broad dissemination of the virus, and, above all, by the need to stress the importance of primary and...

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Autores principales: Lenzi, Andrea, Mirone, Vincenzo, Gentile, Vincenzo, Bartoletti, Riccardo, Ficarra, Vincenzo, Foresta, Carlo, Mariani, Luciano, Mazzoli, Sandra, Parisi, Saverio G, Perino, Antonio, Picardo, Mauro, Zotti, Carla Maria
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3642007/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23391351
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-13-117
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author Lenzi, Andrea
Mirone, Vincenzo
Gentile, Vincenzo
Bartoletti, Riccardo
Ficarra, Vincenzo
Foresta, Carlo
Mariani, Luciano
Mazzoli, Sandra
Parisi, Saverio G
Perino, Antonio
Picardo, Mauro
Zotti, Carla Maria
author_facet Lenzi, Andrea
Mirone, Vincenzo
Gentile, Vincenzo
Bartoletti, Riccardo
Ficarra, Vincenzo
Foresta, Carlo
Mariani, Luciano
Mazzoli, Sandra
Parisi, Saverio G
Perino, Antonio
Picardo, Mauro
Zotti, Carla Maria
author_sort Lenzi, Andrea
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Human Papillomavirus (HPV) is a very resistant, ubiquitous virus that can survive in the environment without a host. The decision to analyse HPV-related diseases in males was due to the broad dissemination of the virus, and, above all, by the need to stress the importance of primary and secondary prevention measures (currently available for women exclusively). The objective of the Consensus Conference was to make evidence-based recommendations that were designed to facilitate the adoption of a standard approach in clinical practice in Italy. METHODS: The Sponsoring Panel put a series of questions to the members of the Scientific Committee who prepared a summary of the currently available information, relevant for each question, after the review and grading of the existing scientific literature. The summaries were presented to a Jury, also called multidisciplinary Consensus Panel, who drafted a series of recommendations. RESULTS: The prevalence of HPV in males ranges between 1.3–72.9%;. The prevalence curve in males is much higher than that in females and does not tend to decline with age. Women appear to have a higher probability of acquiring HPV genotypes associated with a high oncogenic risk, whereas in males the probability of acquiring low- or high-risk genotypes is similar. The HPV-related diseases that affect males are anogenital warts and cancers of the penis, anus and oropharynx. The quadrivalent vaccine against HPV has proved to be effective in preventing external genital lesions in males aged 16–26 years in 90.4%; (95%; CI: 69.2–98.1) of cases. It has also proved to be effective in preventing precancerous anal lesions in 77.5%; (95%; CI: 39.6–93.3) of cases in a per-protocol analysis and in 91.7%; (95%; CI: 44.6–99.8) of cases in a post-hoc analysis. Early ecological studies demonstrate reduction of genital warts in vaccinated females and some herd immunity in males when vaccine coverage is high, although males who have sex with males gained no benefit at all. Males with an immunodeficiency disease are at greater risk of developing disease. Infertility seems to be caused by HPV in some cases. Studies demonstrate vaccination to both genders can be more efficacious and social equity matters are to be taken into consideration. CONCLUSIONS: The Jury made Recommendations based on the scientific evidence presented by the Scientific Committee. Accordingly, for prevention purposes and social fairness and equality, as both sexes are affected by the disease, the vaccination of 12-year-old males against HPV should be recommended in order to guaranty protection to everyone. Aspects related to healthcare policy and economic sustainability, are to be discussed by respective public system representatives. More campaigns to raise awareness through all institutional channels are needed, not only regarding anogenital warts, but for HPV-related diseases in general in males in accordance to new scientific evidences.
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spelling pubmed-36420072013-05-03 Rome consensus conference - statement; human papilloma virus diseases in males Lenzi, Andrea Mirone, Vincenzo Gentile, Vincenzo Bartoletti, Riccardo Ficarra, Vincenzo Foresta, Carlo Mariani, Luciano Mazzoli, Sandra Parisi, Saverio G Perino, Antonio Picardo, Mauro Zotti, Carla Maria BMC Public Health Correspondence BACKGROUND: Human Papillomavirus (HPV) is a very resistant, ubiquitous virus that can survive in the environment without a host. The decision to analyse HPV-related diseases in males was due to the broad dissemination of the virus, and, above all, by the need to stress the importance of primary and secondary prevention measures (currently available for women exclusively). The objective of the Consensus Conference was to make evidence-based recommendations that were designed to facilitate the adoption of a standard approach in clinical practice in Italy. METHODS: The Sponsoring Panel put a series of questions to the members of the Scientific Committee who prepared a summary of the currently available information, relevant for each question, after the review and grading of the existing scientific literature. The summaries were presented to a Jury, also called multidisciplinary Consensus Panel, who drafted a series of recommendations. RESULTS: The prevalence of HPV in males ranges between 1.3–72.9%;. The prevalence curve in males is much higher than that in females and does not tend to decline with age. Women appear to have a higher probability of acquiring HPV genotypes associated with a high oncogenic risk, whereas in males the probability of acquiring low- or high-risk genotypes is similar. The HPV-related diseases that affect males are anogenital warts and cancers of the penis, anus and oropharynx. The quadrivalent vaccine against HPV has proved to be effective in preventing external genital lesions in males aged 16–26 years in 90.4%; (95%; CI: 69.2–98.1) of cases. It has also proved to be effective in preventing precancerous anal lesions in 77.5%; (95%; CI: 39.6–93.3) of cases in a per-protocol analysis and in 91.7%; (95%; CI: 44.6–99.8) of cases in a post-hoc analysis. Early ecological studies demonstrate reduction of genital warts in vaccinated females and some herd immunity in males when vaccine coverage is high, although males who have sex with males gained no benefit at all. Males with an immunodeficiency disease are at greater risk of developing disease. Infertility seems to be caused by HPV in some cases. Studies demonstrate vaccination to both genders can be more efficacious and social equity matters are to be taken into consideration. CONCLUSIONS: The Jury made Recommendations based on the scientific evidence presented by the Scientific Committee. Accordingly, for prevention purposes and social fairness and equality, as both sexes are affected by the disease, the vaccination of 12-year-old males against HPV should be recommended in order to guaranty protection to everyone. Aspects related to healthcare policy and economic sustainability, are to be discussed by respective public system representatives. More campaigns to raise awareness through all institutional channels are needed, not only regarding anogenital warts, but for HPV-related diseases in general in males in accordance to new scientific evidences. BioMed Central 2013-02-07 /pmc/articles/PMC3642007/ /pubmed/23391351 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-13-117 Text en Copyright © 2013 Lenzi et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Correspondence
Lenzi, Andrea
Mirone, Vincenzo
Gentile, Vincenzo
Bartoletti, Riccardo
Ficarra, Vincenzo
Foresta, Carlo
Mariani, Luciano
Mazzoli, Sandra
Parisi, Saverio G
Perino, Antonio
Picardo, Mauro
Zotti, Carla Maria
Rome consensus conference - statement; human papilloma virus diseases in males
title Rome consensus conference - statement; human papilloma virus diseases in males
title_full Rome consensus conference - statement; human papilloma virus diseases in males
title_fullStr Rome consensus conference - statement; human papilloma virus diseases in males
title_full_unstemmed Rome consensus conference - statement; human papilloma virus diseases in males
title_short Rome consensus conference - statement; human papilloma virus diseases in males
title_sort rome consensus conference - statement; human papilloma virus diseases in males
topic Correspondence
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3642007/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23391351
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-13-117
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