An overview of early investigational drugs for the treatment of human papilloma virus infection and associated dysplasia

  • Lynne Hampson
  • , Pierre Martin-Hirsch
  • , Ian N. Hampson*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

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Abstract

Introduction: High-risk HPV (HR-HPV) related invasive cervical cancer (ICC) causes >270,000 deaths per annum world-wide with over 85% of these occurring in low-resource countries. Ablative and excisional treatment modalities are restricted for use with high-grade pre-cancerous cervical disease with HPV infection and low-grade dysplasia mostly managed by a watch-and-wait policy.Areas Covered: Various pharmacological approaches have been investigated as non-destructive alternatives for the treatment of HR-HPV infection and associated dysplasia. These are discussed dealing with efficacy, ease-of-use (physician or self-applied), systemic or locally applied, side-effects, cost and risks. The main focus is the perceived impact on current clinical practice of a self-applied, effective and safe pharmacological anti-HPV treatment.Expert opinion: Current prophylactic HPV vaccines are expensive, HPV type restricted and have little effect in already infected women. Therapeutic vaccines are under development but are also HPV type-restricted. At present, the developed nations use national cytology screening and surgical procedures to treat only women identified with HPV-related high-grade dysplastic disease. However, since HPV testing is rapidly replacing cytology as the test-of-choice, a suitable topically-applied and low-cost antiviral treatment could be an ideal solution for treatment of HPV infection per se with test-of-cure carried out by repeat HPV testing. Cytology would only then be necessary for women who remained HPV positive. Although of significant benefit in the developed countries, combining such a treatment with self-sampled HPV testing could revolutionise the management of this disease in the developing world which lack both the infrastructure and resources to establish national cytology screening programs.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1529-1537
Number of pages9
JournalExpert Opinion on Investigational Drugs
Volume24
Issue number12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2 Dec 2015

Keywords

  • cidofovir
  • CIN
  • dysplasia
  • HIV PI lopinavir
  • HPV
  • HSIL
  • imiquimod
  • PDT
  • pharmacotherapy
  • therapeutic vaccines

Research Beacons, Institutes and Platforms

  • Manchester Cancer Research Centre

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