Terrinoni Matteo, Golia D'Augè Tullio, Mascellino Giuseppe, Adinolfi Federica, Palisciano Michele, Rossetti Dario, Di Renzo Gian Carlo, Giannini Andrea
Department of Medicine and Surgery, University of Perugia, 06129 Perugia, Italy.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, "Alto Tevere" Hospital of Città di Castello, USL Umbria 1, 06127 Perugia, Italy.
Medicina (Kaunas). 2025 Aug 21;61(8):1499. doi: 10.3390/medicina61081499.
: Human papillomavirus (HPV) is the most prevalent sexually transmitted infection worldwide and, beyond its oncogenic potential, may impair reproductive health in both sexes. This review examines HPV's effects on male and female fertility, obstetric outcomes, vertical transmission, and fertility-sparing management in oncology. : A systematic search of PubMed, Embase, and Scopus was conducted using terms related to HPV and reproduction. Additional search terms included those related to therapeutic vaccines, antivirals, and genotype prevalence. English-language human studies reporting clinical reproductive outcomes were included. Thirty-seven studies met the inclusion criteria. Two reviewers independently screened and assessed study quality using a simplified GRADE framework. : In men, seminal HPV infection correlates with reduced progressive motility (SMD ≈ -0.85), abnormal morphology, and increased DNA fragmentation. In women, high-risk HPV doubles the odds of infertility (OR ≈ 2.3) and is associated with endometrial involvement. High first-trimester viral load predicts vertical transmission (aOR 6.4), which is also increased by vaginal delivery (RR 1.8) and is linked to PROM (OR 1.8) and preterm birth (OR 1.8). Modeling suggests that nine-valent vaccination plus 5-year HPV-based screening could reduce CIN2+ by up to 80% and excisional treatments by >75%. Fertility-sparing surgery in early cervical cancer yields a <4% recurrence and up to 68% live birth rates. : This review uniquely synthesizes reproductive and oncologic impacts of HPV and emphasizes risk stratification, multidisciplinary prevention, and fertility preservation. Integration of HPV DNA quantification, personalized care, and vaccine-based strategies offers a path toward optimized outcomes in both sexes.
人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)是全球最常见的性传播感染,除了具有致癌潜力外,还可能损害两性的生殖健康。本综述探讨了HPV对男性和女性生育能力、产科结局、垂直传播以及肿瘤学中保留生育功能管理的影响。
使用与HPV和生殖相关的术语对PubMed、Embase和Scopus进行了系统检索。其他检索词包括与治疗性疫苗、抗病毒药物和基因型流行率相关的词。纳入了报告临床生殖结局的英文人体研究。37项研究符合纳入标准。两名评价者使用简化的GRADE框架独立筛选并评估研究质量。
在男性中,精液HPV感染与进行性运动能力降低(标准化均数差≈-0.85)、形态异常和DNA碎片化增加相关。在女性中,高危HPV使不孕几率增加一倍(比值比≈2.3),并与子宫内膜受累有关。孕早期病毒载量高预示着垂直传播(校正比值比6.4),阴道分娩也会增加垂直传播(相对危险度1.8),且与胎膜早破(比值比1.8)和早产(比值比1.8)有关。模型显示,九价疫苗接种加5年基于HPV的筛查可将2级及以上子宫颈上皮内瘤变(CIN2+)降低多达80%,切除治疗减少>75%。早期宫颈癌保留生育功能手术的复发率<4%,活产率高达68%。
本综述独特地综合了HPV对生殖和肿瘤学的影响,并强调了风险分层、多学科预防和生育功能保留。整合HPV DNA定量、个性化护理和基于疫苗的策略为优化两性结局提供了一条途径。