Screening for HPV-Related Oropharyngeal Cancer in Gay and Bisexual Men: Acceptability and Predicting Possible Use of "Oral Selfies" by Smartphone as a Secondary Prevention Approach.

Venereology (Basel, Switzerland) Pub Date : 2023-12-01 Epub Date: 2023-12-07 DOI:10.3390/venereology2040016
Michael W Ross, Sarah L Bennis, Niles Zoschke, Brian R Simon Rosser, Cyndee L Stull, Alan G Nyitray, Samir S Khariwala, Mark Nichols, Charlene Flash, Michael Wilkerson
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Abstract

Oropharyngeal cancers (OPCa) caused by HPV have emerged as one of the leading causes of malignancies caused by HPV infection. They are also significantly more likely to occur in males and in people with a history of oral sex with multiple partners. Gay and bisexual men are disproportionately affected by HPV-positive oropharyngeal cancers. We studied 1699 gay and bisexual men on 2 major dating sites in the US to assess their knowledge about HPV-related OPCa, attitudes toward screening for it, beliefs about oropharyngeal cancer screening based on the Health Belief Model, and attitudes toward possible screening approaches for OPCa. Knowledge on a 12-item scale was low, with a median of 5 items correct: 72% knew of the benefits of HPV vaccination. Significant predictors of needing OPCa screening included perception of risk for OPCa, seeing it as severe, having lower barriers, fewer reasons to avoid screening, higher knowledge, and being HPV vaccinated were significant predictors, explaining half the total variance. Most participants would accept routine, virtual/online doctor or dental appointments, and over half would accept an in-person screening. Nearly two-thirds stated that they would accept getting checked for OPCa if they could do self-screening at home, and half were prepared to use an online screening tool or app, where they could take an "oral selfie" and send it to a healthcare provider for examination. One-third stated that they would trust the results of a home screening completed by themselves and posted to a website equally as cancer screening completed online by a healthcare provider. Data indicate that despite low OPCA knowledge levels, the risk of HPV-associated OPCa was known. Being at personal risk and having knowledge of disease severity had 70% of the sample thinking about, or preparing to get, screening. Self-screening by a smartphone "oral selfie" transmitted to a screening website was acceptable to many gay and bisexual men, and online screening by a doctor or dentist was acceptable to most. OPCa screening in this population using electronic technology, together with the increasing incidence of HPV-associated OPCa in gay and bisexual men, brings together an opportunity to detect OPCa early.

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筛查男同性恋者和双性恋者中与人乳头瘤病毒相关的口咽癌:通过智能手机拍摄 "口腔自拍照 "作为二级预防方法的可接受性和预测性。
由人类乳头瘤病毒引起的口咽癌(OPCa)已成为人类乳头瘤病毒感染引起恶性肿瘤的主要原因之一。口咽癌也更容易发生在男性和有多个性伴侣口交史的人群中。男同性恋者和双性恋者感染 HPV 阳性口咽癌的比例更高。我们在美国两大交友网站上对 1699 名男同性恋和双性恋进行了研究,以评估他们对与 HPV 相关的口咽癌的了解程度、对口咽癌筛查的态度、基于健康信念模型的口咽癌筛查信念以及对口咽癌可能筛查方法的态度。对 12 个项目的了解程度较低,正确项目的中位数为 5 个:72% 的人知道接种人乳头瘤病毒疫苗的好处。需要进行 OPCa 筛查的重要预测因素包括对 OPCa 风险的认知、将其视为严重疾病、障碍较低、避免筛查的原因较少、知识水平较高以及接种过 HPV 疫苗,其中接种过 HPV 疫苗是重要的预测因素,占总变异的一半。大多数参与者愿意接受常规的虚拟/在线医生或牙医预约,超过一半的人愿意接受面对面的筛查。近三分之二的人表示,如果可以在家进行自我筛查,他们愿意接受口腔癌检查,一半的人愿意使用在线筛查工具或应用程序,在那里他们可以拍摄一张 "口腔自拍照 "并发送给医疗服务提供者进行检查。三分之一的人表示,他们会相信由自己完成并发布到网站上的家庭筛查结果,就像相信由医疗服务提供者在线完成的癌症筛查结果一样。数据表明,尽管人们对 OPCA 的了解程度较低,但与 HPV 相关的 OPCa 风险是众所周知的。70%的样本考虑或准备接受筛查,因为他们了解个人风险和疾病的严重程度。许多男同性恋者和双性恋者都能接受通过智能手机 "口腔自拍 "传送到筛查网站进行自我筛查,大多数人也能接受由医生或牙医进行在线筛查。利用电子技术在这一人群中进行口腔癌筛查,再加上男同性恋者和双性恋者中与人乳头瘤病毒相关的口腔癌发病率不断上升,为早期发现口腔癌提供了机会。
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