“picture your most recent family reunion,” says dr. kimberly alexander, md, a gynecologist registered with the society of obstetricians and gynecologists of canada. “eighty per cent of the [adults] there have had hpv infections.”
hpv — the shorthand used for the human papillomavirus — is the most common sexually transmitted infection. in fact, most people who have sex will get hpv at some point in their lives, though many don’t experience symptoms.
but even when hpv doesn’t cause symptoms right away, it can still cause problems down the line. there are
more than 100 strains of hpv. two strains are linked to genital warts, while several others are linked to cancers. two in particular — types 16 and 18 — lead to the
majority of hpv-associated cancer.
hpv linked to cancers
hpv is most often linked to cervical cancer, but it can also cause anal cancer, vaginal cancer, penile cancer, or oral cancer.
there’s no cure for hpv, but genital warts may be treated or removed by a doctor. and hpv infections usually resolve within a few months of infection, says the
who, with about 90 per cent resolving within two years.
“most people with hpv will clear the infection on their own,” says dr. nancy durand, md, an associate professor in obstetrics and gynecology at the university of toronto, and a practicing clinician at sunnybrook health sciences centre.