Human papillomavirus (HPV) stress

GYN & PERINATAL ZURICH > Human papillomavirus (HPV) stress

Is stress related to the presence and persistence of oncogenic human papillomavirus infection in young women?

Authors: Ulrike Kuebler, Susanne Fischer, Laura Mernone, Christian Breymann, Elvira Abbruzzese and Ulrike Ehlert (2021)

Background:

Persistent high-risk human papillomavirus (HR-HPV) infection is the most important risk factor for the development of cervical cancer, but factors contributing to HR-HPV persistence are incompletely understood. The aim of this study was to test associations of chronic stress and two aspects of daily cortisol secretion (i.e. cortisol awakening response [CAR] and total cortisol production throughout the day [AUCgday]) with HR-HPV status at baseline and 12 months later (follow-up).

Methods:

We studied 188 women (25 ± 3 years) at baseline. Follow-up was restricted to HR-HPV-infected women at baseline. Of the first 48 HR-HPV-positive participants, 42 completed follow-up (16 HR-HPV-positive and 26 HR-HPV-negative). At baseline and follow-up, we determined HR-HPV status in cervical smears, assessed chronic stress and measured salivary cortisol repeatedly throughout the day. At baseline, we analysed salivary cortisol only in a subgroup of 90 participants (45 HR-HPV negative and 45 HR-HPV positive).

Results:

At baseline, higher chronic stress (excessive demands at work: p = 0.022, chronic worry: p = 0.032) and higher CAR (p = 0.014) were associated with HR-HPV positivity at baseline. At follow-up, there was a statistical trend for a positive association between CAR and HR-HPV positivity (p = 0.062). Neither CAR nor AUCgday mediated the associations between chronic stress and HR-HPV status.

Conclusions:

Our results suggest that both chronic stress and daily cortisol are associated with the presence of HR-HPV infection and may therefore play a role in HPV-associated cervical carcinogenesis.

Iron deficiency - tired, listless and emotionally weakened.

26 February 2014

Jenny Kaufmann felt tired, listless and emotionally weakened for a long time. The symptoms affected the training manager's private and professional life so much that she thought of depression herself. After a check-up at the doctor's and a ferritin measurement, she...

Read more

Iron deficiency - Health programme CheckUp

12 February 2013

Without iron, nothing works in the human organism. And yet every second woman suffers from iron deficiency at least once in her life. In the red blood pigment, haemoglobin, iron is responsible for binding and thus supplying the cells with oxygen. The importance...

Read more

Iron deficiency with and without anaemia

1 June 2012

At the 5th Iron Academy (2012) "Recognising iron deficiency and treating it properly", the focus was on practical aspects of iron deficiency. The main topics were iron status in premenopausal women, then anaemia in older people and especially in those with upcoming major orthopaedic surgery. More in-depth workshops...

Read more