Investigator

Andrew W Arthur

Research Assistant · McGill University

Research Interests

AWAAndrew W Arthur
Papers(1)
Detection and Clearan…
Collaborators(5)
Ann N BurchellEduardo L. FrancoFrançois CoutléeMariam El-ZeinPierre-Paul Tellier
Institutions(3)
Mcgill UniversityUnity Health TorontoUniversité de Montréal

Papers

Detection and Clearance of Type-Specific and Phylogenetically Related Genital Human Papillomavirus Infections in Young Women in New Heterosexual Relationships

Abstract Background Understanding the natural history of human papillomavirus (HPV) infections is essential to cervical cancer prevention planning. We estimated HPV type-specific infection detection and clearance in young women. Methods The HPV Infection and Transmission among Couples through Heterosexual activity (HITCH) study is a prospective cohort of 502 college-age women who recently initiated a heterosexual relationship. We tested vaginal samples collected at 6 clinical visits over 24 months for 36 HPV types. Using rates and Kaplan-Meier analysis, we estimated time-to-event statistics with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for detection of incident infections and clearance of incident and present-at-baseline infections (separately). We conducted analyses at the woman- and HPV-levels, with HPV types grouped by phylogenetic relatedness. Results By 24 months, we detected incident infections in 40.4% (CI, 33.4%–48.4%) of women. Incident subgenus 1 (43.4; CI, 33.6–56.4), 2 (47.1; CI, 39.9–55.5), and 3 (46.6; CI, 37.7–57.7) infections cleared at similar rates per 1000 infection-months. We observed similar homogeny in HPV-level clearance rates among present-at-baseline infections. Conclusions Our analyses provide type-specific infection natural history estimates for cervical cancer prevention planning. HPV-level analyses did not clearly indicate that high oncogenic risk subgenus 2 infections persist longer than their low oncogenic risk subgenera 1 and 3 counterparts.

10Works
1Papers
5Collaborators
Papillomavirus InfectionsUterine Cervical NeoplasmsSexually Transmitted Diseases

Positions

2024–

Research Assistant

McGill University

Country

CA