Human Papillomavirus Carcinogenicity and the Need of New Perspectives: Thoughts from a Retrospective Analysis on Human Papillomavirus Outcomes Conducted at the Hospital University of Bari, Apulia, Italy, between 2011 and 2022.
Raffaele Del PreteDaniela NestaFrancesco TriggianoMara LorussoStefania GarzoneLorenzo VitulanoSofia DenicolòFrancesca IndraccoloMichele MastriaLuigi RongaInchingolo FrancescoSergey K AityanKieu C D NguyenToai Cong TranCiro Gargiulo IsaccoLuigi SantacrocePublished in: Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) (2024)
Our study provided comprehensive epidemiological data on HPV prevalence and genotype distribution among 9647 participants, which could serve as a significant reference for clinical practice, and it implied the necessity for more effective screening methods for HPV carcinogenesis covering the use of more specific molecular investigations. Although this is a predominantly descriptive and epidemiological study, the data obtained offer not only a fairly unique trend compared to other studies of different realities and latitudes but also lead us to focus on the HPV infection within two groups of young people and adults and hypothesize the possible involvement of dysbiosis, stem cells, and the retrotransposition mechanism.