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Warts (also known as verrucae when appearing on hands and feet) are benign epidermal proliferations caused by human papilloma virus (HPV) that are common in the general population at some point in life. Warts can vary in size, appearance, shape, and treatment response, depending on the type of epithelium affected.
Warts can be categorized into different types. For example, common warts represent individualized nodules or papules with a rough surface which are most commonly observed on the back of hands and fingers. On the other hand, genital warts are soft growths on the skin and mucus membranes of the genital region.
HPV infection and subsequent development of warts that are very commonly observed represent the most common viral infection of the skin, affecting 7 to 10% of the general population. These numbers can be 50 to 100 times higher in immunocompromised individuals (such as kidney-transplant recipients or those on chemotherapy) where it affects more than 90% of patients.
Warts may occur throughout a lifetime, there is an increased incidence during school age, reaching a peak in adolescence and early adulthood. Cross-sectional studies conducted in schools have shown that prevalence in children varies between 2 and 20%. If we consider the work place as a risk factor, handlers of meat, poultry and fish have a higher prevalence in comparison to other workers.
The virus is transmitted via direct or indirect contact with someone who has the lesion. It is released along with shedding skin cells in a nonlytic manner. Genital warts can be spread during vaginal or anal sex (also by sharing sex toys) and condoms do not provide complete protection.
Minor injuries, trauma or maceration can cause dysfunctions in the epithelial barrier and subsequent loss of continuity in the skin, hence allowing viral infection and the formation of warts. The incubation period ranges from 3 weeks to 8 months after contact, and spontaneous regression is seen in a majority of cases.
HPV is a small double-stranded DNA virus with a genome of approximately 8000 base pairs, and all types of the virus show tropism for cells of the stratified squamous epithelium; nevertheless, the difference in affinity can be observed for various anatomical sites. For example, HPV 1 is a typical representative of skin HPV type that shows a high rate of replication in keratinized epithelium. Conversely, HPV 16 is a mucosal HPV type with preference for genital regions.
The life cycle of a HPV is linked to the cell differentiation program of the host cell. Initial infection requires access of infectious particles to cells in the basal layer; there is no viral replication at this site and the virus just keeps its genome by amplification of low copy numbers. Replication and the synthesis of proteins occur in the differentiated keratinocytes of the suprabasal layer.
Development of lesions and their type both correlate with the quantity of detected viral particles. In younger particles there is a higher amount of viruses in comparison to old ones; furthermore, plantar warts contain higher viral load than common warts. It must be noted that in benign lesions (such as warts) the replication of HPV genome is extrachromosomal.
The histopathological characteristics of viral warts are acanthosis, papillomatosis and hyperkeratosis, with confluence of the epidermal ridges in the center of the lesion and koilocytes. Some authors have also suggested that certain histological features are specific to each type of HPV – thus, histopathological examination would help in identifying different viral types.