“…5 HPVs preferentially infect the mucosa of the genitals, upper-respiratory tract, and the skin, 6 and they are recognized as important pathogenic factors of cervical cancer and precancerous lesions. 6,7 Based on the association of HPV with cervical cancer or the risk of carcinogenesis, all HPV genotypes can be divided into different subgroups of mucosal HPVs: high-risk types of HPVs (HR-HPV), such as HPVs 16,18,31,33,35,39,45,51,52,56,58,59,68,73,and 82, which are classified as carcinogenic to humans 5,8 ; low-risk types of HPVs (LR-HPV), such as HPVs 6,11,28,32,40,42,43,44,54,55,57,61,62,71,72,74,81,83,84,86,87, and 89; probable/possible HR-HPVs (pHR-HPV), such as HPVs 68, 26, 53, 66, 82, 70, 67, and 73. 5 The HR-HPVs are the causes of approximately 5% of all cancers in humans and one-third of all virus-induced tumors.…”