Archives of Medical Research
Volume 40, Issue 6 , Pages 449-465, August 2009

The Role of Retinoid Deficiency and Estrogens as Cofactors in Cervical Cancer

Departamento de Genética y Biología Molecular, Cinvestav-IPN, México D.F., México

Received 14 May 2009; accepted 9 July 2009.

(ARCMED-D-09-00199)

Persistent infection with high-risk human papillomaviruses (HR-HPVs) is involved in cervical cancer (CC), a major cause of cancer mortality worldwide. Infection occurs primarily at the transformation zone (TZ), the most estrogen- and retinoid-sensitive region of the cervix. Development of CC affects a small percentage of HR-HPV-infected women and often takes decades after infection, suggesting that HR-HPV is a necessary but not sufficient cause of CC. Thus, other cofactors are necessary for progression from cervical HR-HPV infection to cancer such as long-term use of hormonal contraceptives, multiparity, smoking, as well as micronutrient depletion and in particular retinoid deficiency, which alters epithelial differentiation, cellular growth and apoptosis of malignant cells. Therefore, early detection of HR-HPV and management of precancerous lesions together with a profound understanding of additional risk factors could be a strategy to avoid this disease. In this review we focus on the synergic effect of estrogens, retinoid deficiency and HR-HPVs in the development of CC. These risk factors may act in concert to induce neoplastic transformation in squamous epithelium of the cervix, setting the stage for secondary genetic or epigenetic events leading to cervical cancer.

Key Words: Papillomavirus, Oncoproteins, Estrogens, Retinoids, Transformation zone, Cervical cancer

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PII: S0188-4409(09)00140-4

doi:10.1016/j.arcmed.2009.08.002

Archives of Medical Research
Volume 40, Issue 6 , Pages 449-465, August 2009