𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Case control study of cervical cancer in Herrera Province, Republic of Panama

✍ Scribed by William C. Reeves; Louise A. Brinton; Maria M. Brenes; Evelia Quiroz; William M. Rawls; Rosa C. De Britton


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1985
Tongue
French
Weight
667 KB
Volume
36
Category
Article
ISSN
0020-7136

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Abstract

A previous survey found the average annual age‐adjusted incidence of cervical cancer in Herrera Province, Panama, to be 79/100, 000, exceeding any other reported world rate. In an effort to clarify the reasons for this excessive occurrence, a case‐control study was conducted among patients diagnosed between 1974‐1980. Sixty‐six percent of cervical cancer patients from Herrera Province were alive and were contacted by the study team; of these 91% were successfully interviewed and provided serum specimens. The total study encompassed 156/169 surviving patients and 309 age‐neighborhood matched controls. Sexual promiscuity was uncommon, but it exerted a major effect, with those reporting 4 or more life‐time sex partners being at a 4‐fold excess risk compared to those reporting only one partner. First intercourse at a young age was common (21% began sexual activity prior to age 16) but it failed to alter risk once number of partners was taken into account. Oral contraceptive use was associated with a 2‐fold excess risk and this was not substantially affected by controlling for sexual parameters. Thirty‐three percent of the study subjects had anti‐herpes‐simplex type‐2 antibody as measured by both neutralization and radioimmunoassays. Although results of the neutralization test were not predictive of risk, women with a radioimmunoassay indicative of HSV‐2 infection were at a 40% excess risk for cervical cancer after adjustment for sexual characteristics.


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