PubMed.gov BMC Public Health. 2011 Jun 14;11(1):470. [Epub ahead of print] Lefevere E, Hens N, De Smet F, Van Damme P. Abstract ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: We investigated dynamic patterns and predictors of HPV vaccination initiation in Flanders (Belgium) by girls aged 12 to 18, between 2007 and 2009, the period immediately after the introduction of the […]
HPV positive bronchopulmonary carcinomas in women with previous high-grade cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN III).
Pub Med Acta Oncol. 1999;38(5):639-47. Hennig EM, Suo Z, Karlsen F, Holm R, Thoresen S, Nesland JM. Source Department of Pathology, The Norwegian Radium Hospital and Institute for Cancer Research, University of Oslo, Montebello. Abstract A significant higher incidence of some cancers, especially lung cancer, has been found in women with previous HPV-related (human papillomavirus) […]
HPV in situ hybridization with catalyzed signal amplification and polymerase chain reaction in establishing cerebellar metastasis of a cervical carcinoma
Human Pathology Volume 30, Issue 5, Pages 587-591 (May 1999) Chao-Cheng Huang, MD, Matthew L Kashima, MD, Haiyan Chen, MD, Ie-Ming Shih, MD, PhD, Robert J Kurman, MD, T.-C Wu, MD, Ph Abstract We report an unusual case of cerebellar metastasis from a cervical adenosquamous carcinoma in which molecular techniques assisted in establishing the correct diagnosis. The patient was a 43-year-old […]
Detection of HPV 16 and HPV 18 DNA in the blood of patients with cervical cancer
Pub Med J Med Virol. 2005 Mar;75(3):435-9. Kay P, Allan B, Denny L, Hoffman M, Williamson AL. Source Institute of Infectious Disease and Molecular Medicine, University of Cape Town, Observatory, Cape Town, South Africa. Abstract Persistent infection of the uterine cervix with high-risk human papillomaviruses (HPV) is causally associated with cancer of the cervix. A […]
Beyond human papillomavirus: the cervix, exogenous secondary factors, and the development of cervical precancer and cancer.
Castle PE. SourceDivision of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD, USA. castlep@mail.nih.gov Abstract Human papillomavirus (HPV) is the necessary but probably not sufficient cause of cervical precancer and cancer. Secondary exogenous and endogenous factors, HPV cofactors, may contribute to the probability of a cancer-associated (oncogenic) HPV infection progressing to cervical precancer and […]
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