“…[1][2][3] There is evidence for the presence of more than 100 types of HPV in the medical literature. In addition, 15 types of HPV (16,18,35,31,39,51,45,56,52,66,59, 69, 68, 82, and 73) are considered to be highly involved in the pathogenesis of genital cancer in women while HPVs responsible for the warts of genitals and skin (HPV 6,11,43,42,40,44,61,54,72,70, and 81) have lower pathogenicity. [4][5][6] Further, HPV is related to other malignancies including anal, oropharyngeal, penile, vulvar, and HPV-related tumors, which together represent 0.7% of carcinomas in both genera.…”