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Yes, anal PAP smears

Richard Moreau
Sat, 15 Sep 2001 19:59:08 -0700

An STD test you may need
Few people know about anal Pap smears, but what you don't know can cause
cancer.

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By David Tuller

Sept. 10, 2001 | I've been a practicing homosexual for more than two decades
now and consider myself reasonably well-educated on gay men's health issues,
but I'd never heard of anal Pap smears until very recently. Nor had most of
the friends -- practicing homosexuals all -- to whom I mentioned the topic.

Live and learn. No one bats an eye when a woman says she has had a Pap smear
to check for signs of cellular changes that can lead to cervical cancer. But
ask the average gay man if he's ever had the rear-end version and he's
likely to stare at you in confusion or horror or, in some cases, a barely
suppressed titillation. Yet a small but growing number of gay health experts
now argue that, for men who have sex with men, an anal Pap smear is an
important preventative step for anal cancer.
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Here's the reason: Human papillomavirus, or HPV, is an umbrella name for
dozens of viral strains that can cause warts on different parts of the body,
as well as some forms of cancer. About 20 types of HPV can lead to genital
and anal infections in both women and men. Because the glands in the anus
are similar to those in a woman's cervix, HPV infection in either area can
result in cancerous cell changes.

Anal sex is the primary risk factor -- but not the only one -- for anal HPV
infection. Dr. Stephen Goldstone, a gay surgeon who specializes in rectal
and anal disorders, has been promoting the idea of routine anal Pap smears
for men who have sex with men for several years, along with Dr. Joel
Palefsky, a professor and research scientist at the University of California
at San Francisco. Dr. Goldstone, who is also the medical director of
GayHealth.com and the author of "The Ins and Outs of Gay Sex: A Medical
Handbook for Men," says that although the procedure is starting to gain
acceptance, even most gay doctors have still not heard of it.

Dr. Goldstone recently spoke with Salon from New York, where he maintains a
private practice and is a professor of surgery at Mount Sinai Medical
Center. 


An STD test you may need | 1, 2


I'm a gay man, and before recently I'd never heard about this. Why isn't
anyone talking about it?



It's an emerging health concern for gay men, that's for sure. And I think
it's going to become a greater and greater problem. Everybody says, "How
come I've never heard about it?" Part of the reason is that it probably
takes 10 years or more for a normal cell to become a cancerous cell, and the
people at greatest risk are those with HIV. But until the last few years,
most people with HIV were not living long enough for the problem to become
apparent. That's changed in the last five years because so many people are
living longer. 
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How widespread is the problem?

Dr. Joel Palefsky at UCSF has done some screening studies and he's estimated
that about 65 percent of HIV-negative gay men and close to 100 percent of
HIV-positive men carry human papillomavirus in their anal canals. Some types
of anal HPV are more likely to cause pre-cancerous cell changes, and a large
percentage of the HIV-positive gay men carry that type.

As far as anal cancer, the incidence in HIV-negative gay men is 35 per
100,000, which is about what the cervical cancer rate in women was before
doctors began doing routine Pap smears. The incidence of anal cancer among
HIV-positive gay men is estimated to be about 70 per 100,000. These may seem
like tiny numbers, but they are actually very significant because this is a
disease we never really used to see. And it's becoming more widespread, like
all sexually transmitted diseases.

At this point there is no treatment that can eradicate the virus. Right now
there is research taking place on both preventive vaccines, which would be
administered before someone was ever infected, and treatment vaccines, which
might, for example, be able to prevent the progression of an existing
infection to cancer.

So is anal sex the main culprit here?

Yes. The biggest risk factors for anal HPV are multiple sexual partners and
anal sex. But even if someone has never had anal sex, every man who has sex
with men is at risk for it. Genital HPV can spread from skin-to-skin
contact. It doesn't require penetration. A finger can spread it, or someone
might rub his penis on the outside of his partner's anus during foreplay,
and from there it's easy for the virus to spread inside. And a condom may
not be protective. It doesn't cover the base of the penile shaft, the pubic
hair or the scrotum, which are all places where HPV can be found.

Probably a majority of all men have penile HPV even if they don't have warts
there. It's pretty rare that the virus will migrate from a man's penis to
the anus, but it can be spread to a sexual partner's anus or vagina, and in
a woman it's easier for it to migrate from the vaginal area to her anus.
That's why women should also be screened routinely for anal HPV.

Now I've never had anal warts. Do I have to worry about this?

Yes. A lot of patients who come in just for screening end up having warts
they didn't realize they had. They say they don't have anal warts, and then
we find a tiny anal wart. And when people do have anal warts, we need to
start taking that seriously. Many people will go to dermatologists or
internists and just have their external anal warts removed. But often it's
just the tip of the iceberg, and no one looks inside.

How did you first start recognizing this as an issue?

It was about 1996 or 1997. I would be taking out anal warts and I'd send
them out for analysis if they were a little funny-looking. Anal warts have
been a problem for gay men for a long time but most of them never get
analyzed. At that time, however, I started getting back these weird
pathology reports of the kind of cellular abnormalities that can lead to
cervical cancer in women.

So then what exactly is an anal Pap smear?

You do it like a regular Pap smear, except in the anus. You insert a
non-lubricated swab inside the anus and it picks up a sample of the cells.
The cells are sent to a specially trained doctor called a cytologist, who
examines them for abnormalities. Just as in women, a Pap smear is basically
a predictor of abnormality, but it's not specific about what kind of
abnormality. So if there's an abnormal Pap smear, then we do a procedure
called a high-resolution anoscopy, which is actually looking inside the
rectum to see what abnormalities are there.

You can find different grades. You get atypical cells of unknown
significance, which are very slightly abnormal. Then there are greater but
still moderate cellular abnormalities, which is called low-grade dysplasia,
and more advanced abnormalities, called high-grade dysplasia. If we see
changes indicative of high-grade dysplasia, we do a biopsy and a pathologist
can tell us if it's high-grade or even cancer. Less than 10 percent of
high-grade dysplasia goes on to cancer, but we don't know which 10 percent.

So let's say it's high-grade. What then?

Then you treat it. If it's a small amount of high-grade dysplasia, you can
freeze it or burn it or put a little acid on it right in the office, the
same way you would treat a wart. If it's a truly invading anal cancer, the
treatment is chemotherapy and radiation. But you'd like to find these people
before they actually have cancer.

Joel Palefsky and I have been trying to get the word out for a while that
this is a major health concern and we need to deal with it. One of the
things HIV has done is made it seem like AIDS is the only illness gay men
get. And in the medical community, we find that it's possible to go to an
HIV doctor and just have your T-cell count and viral load looked at and
never have to take off your clothes for an examination.

But if it's so simple, why are so few doctors doing it?

There has been reluctance, even among gay doctors with gay patients, to deal
with anal-rectal disease. I get e-mails from people all over the world
asking questions about rectal disease when they won't bring it up with their
own doctor. Straight docs don't understand gay sexual practices and are
reluctant to talk about it, and most people who go to HIV doctors don't even
get asked about their sexual habits.

Some doctors will not recognize it as an issue until one of their patients
actually gets anal cancer. The doctor will be totally upset about it, and
then will start doing anal Pap smears on other patients. One gay doctor
referred someone to me who supposedly had hemorrhoids, and I examined him
and found anal cancer. I called the doctor to tell him, and after that he
started doing anal Pap smears on all of his other patients. Then he called
me back and said, "Ohmigod, they're all coming back with abnormalities."

You would never blink an eye if woman said she went for a Pap smear. And if
she comes back with a positive result, we don't look at her and assume she's
promiscuous, even though it's a sexually transmitted disease. There's no
negative social connotation for women because we know that many women get
HPV with their first or second sexual experience.

But men get tremendous embarrassment from the diagnosis. They want to know,
"What do I tell my partner or boyfriend?" When a patient comes to me with
warts, I tell them that they probably didn't catch it from the current
boyfriend, since they can appear years after the initial HPV infection. If
you're in a monogamous relationship, you want to come home and kill your
partner because you assume he's cheating, when in reality you probably
caught it during one of your first sexual experiences.

So how often should I be getting an anal Pap smear?

Primary care physicians should be doing routine anal Pap smears on men who
have sex with men. HIV-positive men should have an anal Pap smear every
year, and HIV-negative men every two or three years, starting in their 20s.
Heterosexual HIV-positive men are also at increased risk for HPV infection,
although not nearly as much as men who have sex with men. And women should
have routine anal Pap smears just as they have routine cervical Pap smears
because of the chances that the virus could spread.

Patients themselves should be asking for this because they have tremendous
power within the medical community. We're all healthcare consumers, and if
more and more of us start asking our doctors about anal Pap smears, it will
motivate them to learn more about it.

salon.com



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About the writer
David Tuller is a contributing writer at Salon. He is the author of Cracks
in the Iron Closet: Travels in Gay and Lesbian Russia." 


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  • Yes, anal PAP smears Richard Moreau