HPV Increases Incidence of Head, Neck Cancers
9/17/2007 web-based article Claudia Pinto The Tennessean (Tennessean.com) Smoking and drinking alcohol aren’t the only habits that increase the risk of head and neck cancer, there is a lesser-known but just as deadly contributor: oral sex. The disease is striking an increasing number of younger adults aged 20 to 44, and the cause is attributed to a sexually transmitted disease known as human papillomavirus or HPV, according to a report in next month’s issue of Cancer, the American Cancer Society’s peer-reviewed journal. Dr. Wendell Yarbrough said he’s seeing the trend in patients he treats at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. “The rate of positive HPV tumors are increasing in the younger folks,” said Yarbrough, who is a Vanderbilt associate professor of otolaryngology and cancer biology and an Ingram professor of cancer research. “We’ve treated some people in their 20s. We used to never see it in people that young.” “Head and neck cancer used to be a disease of people in their 50s and 60s who smoked and drank a lot.” Yarbrough believes the reason for the change is an increase in HPV infection among the general public, due in part, people having more sexual partners and engaging in sexual activity earlier in life. Studies back up his views. Twenty-nine percent of American men and nine percent of American women have had 15 or more sexual partners in their lifetime, according to a study by the National Center for Health Statistics, a branch of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. [...]