Tongue and Tonsil Cancers May Be Linked to Early Sexual Habits, Research Suggests
Many people engage in oral sex as a form of "safer sex" -- in part as a response to HIV/AIDS prevention campaigns of the 1990s that cast sexual intercourse as dangerous. In that light, oral sex began to look like less of a big deal.
However, when you give a man or woman oral sex, you risk getting a number of infections in your mouth and throat -- including gonorrhea, syphilis, herpes and HPV.
HPV is the most common sexually transmitted disease in the United States. It's easy to transmit: Nearly half of sexually active people will get HPV at some point in their lives, and it's even more common among people with HIV.
HPV is a sneaky sexually transmitted infection, often occurring without a single symptom. However, HIV-positive people are at higher risk for developing more stubborn symptoms than HIV-negative people -- including genital warts and a condition called dysplasia, which can potentially lead to cancer.
Health care providers and researchers have known for a while about the connection between HPV and certain types of cancer -- including cervical and anal cancers as well as cancers of the throat area. Despite this, most HIV-positive people and HIV-negative people who are sexually active seem largely unconcerned about the risks of HPV -- and even less so about the risks of oral HPV.
But this may be about to change. Oropharyngeal cancers (cancers of the back of tongue, the pharynx and the tonsils) are on the rise, according to recent studies, particularly a landmark study published in the September 2009 issue of the journal Cancer Prevention Research. HPV is to blame in a significant number of those cancers -- and one strain, HPV-16, which is also responsible for most cervical cancers, seems to be the culprit.
The Good News: HPV-Positive Cancer Is Treatable
There's some good news, though: The Cancer Prevention Research study found that cancers of the throat area that come from HPV are actually easier to treat than similar cancers that develop from other risk factors, such as smoking or drinking alcohol.
Further, HPV-positive tumors are very different from their cousins that grow from excessive smoking or drinking, according to Kevin Cullen, M.D., the senior author on the Cancer Prevention Research study. Researchers are still trying to make sense of all the differences, but one important thing they've discovered is that HPV-positive tumors have fewer of the genes that resist chemotherapy than do HPV-negative tumors. This means that, for the most part, people with HPV-positive tumors can breathe a sigh of relief since there's a good chance they'll do well on treatment.
It's also important to note, again, that HPV-positive oral cancer is not all that common. Considering how common oral sex is, how prevalent HPV is (an estimated 20 million people in the U.S. are walking around with HPV at any given time) and how relatively uncommon cancers of the tongue and tonsil are (they account for less than three percent of all cancers in the U.S., according to the National Cancer Institute), it's clear that just because someone has HPV does not mean that cancer is definitely in their future.
Can HPV in the Throat Area Be Prevented?
Many studies of the HPV vaccine in men and boys have shown good results -- and an outside expert panel to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration recently recommended its approval for that use.
Meanwhile, it's clear that the U.S. needs to do a better job at stepping up oral sex education and risk-reduction efforts, not only with youth and teens, but with adults as well. We all need to be aware that oral sex is not just good, clean fun after all, and take appropriate steps to keep ourselves safe, whether that means using dental dams and Saran Wrap, or making sure to get checked often for HPV (i.e., make sure your doctor checks your mouth and throat) for early signs of potential HPV-related cancer.
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