Prevalence, Screening, and Parental Awareness of Oral Human Papillomavirus in Pediatric Populations (HOPE Project): Findings from a Cross-Sectional Pilot Study
Vera Panzarella, Giuseppina Campisi, Giuseppina Capra, Arianna Sucato, Viviana D’Arpa, Giuliana Minacapilli, Gaetano La Mantia, Laura Maniscalco, Monica Bazzano, Elena Consiglio, Giovanna Giuliana

TL;DR
This study explores oral HPV infection in children and finds low prevalence but significant gaps in parental awareness about HPV and its vaccine.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel salivary sampling method and highlights critical gaps in parental knowledge about HPV transmission and vaccination.
Findings
The LolliSponge device was well accepted for oral HPV sampling in children.
Only 5.7% of children had received the HPV vaccine, and most parents were unaware of HPV transmission routes.
Lower parental education and larger family size were associated with reduced HPV vaccine awareness.
Abstract
Background: Human papillomavirus (HPV) infection in pediatric populations is an emerging area of interest due to its potential role in early viral transmission and long-term oncogenic risk. The oral cavity may serve as a reservoir for high-risk HPV types; however, its prevalence in children remains under-investigated and unclear. The HOPE (Human papillomavirus Oral infection in PEdiatric population) project aims to assess the prevalence of oral HPV using an innovative salivary sampling method, also exploring the influence of social determinants on parental awareness and attitudes toward HPV vaccination. This paper presents the findings from a cross-sectional pilot study. Methods: This pilot investigation included a total of 70 children (0–14 years) who underwent an oral examination and non-invasive salivary sampling using the novel LolliSponge device. HPV detection was performed using…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCervical Cancer and HPV Research · Cleft Lip and Palate Research · Head and Neck Cancer Studies
