The Journal of Family Practice, Volume 44, Issue 4: Pages 407-409, April 1997.
Brief Report:
Minoqua, Wisconsin
The commonly believed notion that circumcised men cannot develop penile cancer can result in delays in diagnosis. Recent medical literature has failed to confirm the protective effect of circumcision on penile neoplasms. Physicians need to be aware that men circumcised after 1 month of age may be at higher risk for penile cancer than those never circumcised.
Key Words. Penile neoplasms; circumcision; Bowen's disease.
(J Fam Pract 1997; 44:407-410.)
A commonly held misperception in modern medicine is that circumcised men cannot develop neoplasms of the penis.1 This misperception can be traced to a single 1932 article by Wolbarst,2 a procircumcision advocate who also proclaimed circumcision as the cure for everything from masturbation to epilepsy to infant death.3 This often cited paper based its conclusion on gathered reports of penile cancer from hospitals. No attempt was made to confirm circumcision status, and no control group was employed. None of the cases of penile cancer occurred in Jewish men circumcised at birth, prompting Wolbarst to conclude that circumcision prevented penile cancer. Until recently this conclusion has not been properly studied or challenged. As circumcision gained popularity early in this century, the number of circumcised men reaching the age when penile cancer becomes apparent is rapidly increasing. Concomitantly, the number of circumcised men with penile cancer is already beginning to increase.4 The following report demonstrates the potential danger resulting from this misperception.
A 72-year-old white man presented to his physician in August 1992 with several millimeters of what was described in the chart as white erythema
on the right glans penis. The lesion had been treated by a urologist with creams.
The patient was referred again to the urologist, but delayed the appointment until his followup cystoscopy for a papillary, grade 2, transitional-cell bladder carcinoma, which had been diagnosed in 1984. The erythematous patch was noted on the glans again by his physician in May 1994. In August 1995, at the age of 76 years, the patient was referred to a dermatologist, whose biopsy showed a squamous cell carcinoma in situ (Bowen's disease). No further evidence of disease has been identified in the first 6 months of clinical follow-up.
Significant past medical history included nonrecurrent bladder carcinoma, left hemicolectomy in 1964 for colon adenocarcinoma, excision of a rectal tubovillous adenoma in 1994, benign prostatic hypertrophy status post-transuretharl resection of prostate, prostatourethritis in 1965, and hepatitis A with jaundice in 1942. He has been followed at the Marshfield Clinic in Marshfield, Wisconsin since 1928.
He is of German descent and has lived his entire life in Marathon County, Wisconsin as a dairy farmer. He was married in 1951 and has had no sexual relationships outside his marriage. He has a 23-pack- year history of cigarette smoking but quit in 1959 and reports drinking an occasional beer. His circumcision status was not documented in the chart. After a review of the chart, the patient was contacted and he confirmed he had been circumcised as long as he couldremember.
Risk Factor | Odds ratio* | 95% Confidence Interval |
---|---|---|
Phimosis | 35.20 | 11.43-108.39 |
Phimosis8 | 8.10 | 5.22-12.54 |
Difficulty retracting foreskin8 | 6.23 | 3.18-12.19 |
Smoking8 | 2.63 | 1.48-4.68 |
Smoking9 | 1.43 | 1.11-1.85 |
Genital warts7 | 27.63 | 3.46-220.45 |
Genital warts5 | 7.52 | 3.27-17.29 |
>30 sexual partners8 | 3.32 | 1.93-6.72 |
Previous genital condition9 | 2.05 | 1.05-4.01 |
Chewing tobacco6 | 2.80 | 2.07-3.80 |
Snuff9 | 3.51 | 1.57-7.80 |
Late circumcision9 | 26.76 | 3.57-200.93 |
Late circumcision27+ | 7.81 | 1.20-51.00 |
Late circumcision8 vs Never circumcised vs infant circumcision | 1.16 3.55 | 0.63-2.17@ 1.75-7.20 |
Penile rash8 | 13.14 | 5.46-31.63 |
Penile tear8 | 6.24 | 3.41-11.44 |
Foreskin raw data | 2.00 | 1.00-0.16 |
Age controlled for= | 1.19 | 0.77-1.85@ |
vs. infant circumcision | 3.04 | 1.79-5.15 |
* Calculated using data in original studies. + No control group for this published series. Published rate of circumcision in Denmark used to make calculations. @ Not statistically significant. = Calculations made adjusting control group for age. |
Cancer of the penis is an extremely rare malignancy with a predicted lifetime risk of 1 in 1437 men in the United States5 and 1 in 1694 in Denmark,6 representing 0.09% of all cancers and 0.16% of cancers in the male adult.5 The risk factors for penile cancer (Table) include genital warts,7,8 smoking,8,9 past sexually transmitted diseases,7,10 a sexual relationship outside marriage,7 multiple sexual partners,8 poor genital hygiene,7,8,11,12 phimosis,7-10,13 previous genital conditions (including urinary tract infection, genital warts, yeast infections, chlamydia, genital crabs, gonorrhea, genital herpes, syphilis, genital ulcers or sores),7 penile rash (which lasted longer than 1 month) or penile tear,8 chewing tobacco or areca nut, using snuff,9 and postnatal circumcision.7,8 Of these risk factors, a history of genital warts appears to be the most significant, leading experts to identify human papillomavirus (HPV) as the most common causative factor in penile cancer.14
Interestingly, genital warts are now more common in circumcised men,15 and HPV-associated lesions are equally prevalent in circumcised and intact men. Penile intraepithelial neoplasia, although found rarely, is slightly more common in men with foreskins.16 In one study of 11 men with carcinoma in situ of the penis, 10 had been circumcised as infants.17
The role of circumcision in preventing penile cancer has recently been called into question.19 In addition to several publications documenting cancer in circumcised men,19-26 a recent case control study of 110 men with penile cancer from the Pacific Northwest revealed that 41 (37%) had been circumcised.8 Relative to men circumcised at birth, the risk for penile cancer was 3.04 times as great among men who were never circumcised and 3.55 times as great among men who were circumcised after the neonatal period. The magnitude of risk for developing penile cancer was similar in smokers, but a history of multiple sex partners or genital warts were the strongest risk factors (Table). While neonatal circumcision may play a small role in preventing penile carcinoma, 20% of the patients in this study were circumcised at birth.8 When the control group was properly adjusted for age, there was no difference between the case group and control group in circumcision status.
Circumcision performed after the newborn period may increase the likelihood of penile neoplasms. In a Danish study, men with localized squamous cell carcinoma of the penis were 7.81 times as likely to have been circumcised after the newborn period as the general population.8,27 Maden et al8 demonstrated that men circumcised after the newborn period had a slightly higher risk when compared with those circumcised at birth.8
In an epidemiologic study with both retrospective and prospective cases from China, 157 men with penile neoplasms were identified. Circumcised men were markedly more likely to develop penile cancer than controls.7 The circumcision scar is often the focus of tumor formation.19 In Africa an uncontrolled study found that all of the circumcised men who developed penile cancer were circumcised late in adolescence or adulthood.28 Why the timing of circumcision is a significant factor is unclear.
For the circumcision status of the patient to be missing from the chart for the past 60 years is indefensible, but not uncommon. In a series of penile cancer patients from the Mayo Clinic, 15% did not have their circumcision status documented in the chart.14 Because circumcision is so prevalent in the United States, a circumcised penis is often described as normal
in medical records,thus providing no useful information.
In spite of the body of evidence to the contrary, several circumcision advocates still profess that penile cancer is virtually eliminated
by neonatal circumcision.1,28-32 Having been given access to respectable medical journals, their errant message has been adopted by many mainstream physicians.14 The persistence and prevalence of his myth may be detrimental, as evidenced by the 3-year delay in this patient between the time the penile lesion was noted and a biopsy taken.
This patient had multiple previous neoplasms, which prompts us to speculate whether men who develop penile cancer may be more cancer-prone.
Do these cancer-prone men respond to stimuli (such as HPV) by forming a penile neoplasm, when the vast majority of men with similar exposure will not? Should occupational or environmental irritants also be considered? These questions suggest the need for further study.
Officials of the American Cancer Society do not recommend circumcision as a cancer preventative measure. (personal correspondence, H. Shingleton and C. W. Heath, Jr, to Peter Rappo, MD, Feb 16, 1996). Recognizing that circumcised men can acquire penile cancer are are at equal or higher risk for HPV-associated lesions is the first step in preventing penile cancer. Screening for, recognizing, and treating these lesions as they develop on the penis as is currently performed on the uterine cervix may be the most responsible approach to controlling both cervical and penile cancer; however the utility of such screening needs to be explored.16,32 Persistent penile rashs are a highly significant risk factor for penile cancer8 and should not be ignored.
Because of the absence of a national tumor registry in the United States, most of the epidemiological studies have been performed outside the United States. When the incidence of penile cancers from different countries are compared, the biggest factor appears to be indoor plumbing.33 The downward trend in the incidence of penile cancer over the past 47 years in Denmark, where 1.6% of men are circumcised, has been partly attributed to better penile hygiene.6 Ironically, Denmark, in spite of its low circumcision rate, currently has a lower incidence of penile cancer than the United States, where 60% to 80% of men are circumcised.
The authors wish to express their gratitude to Ann C. Smith, MD, for referral of this patient.
From the Department of Pathology (C.J.C.), Department of Pediatrics (R.S.V.H.) Department of Family Practice (M.R.S.) Marshfield Clinic, Lakeland Center (M.R.S.), Minoqua, Wisconsin. Requests for reprints should be addressed to Robert S. Van Howe, MD, Marshfield Clinic, Lakeland Center, 9601 Townline Rd. Minocqua, WI 54548.
E-mail: vanhower@dgabby.mfldclin.edu
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