Actor reveals to the Guardian that HPV,
transmitted through oral sex, was responsible for his throat cancer.
Xan Brooks' full interview: Michael Douglas on Liberace, Cannes, cancer and cunnilingus
Michael Douglas: 'There was a
walnut-size tumour at the base of my tongue that no other doctor had seen.'
Photograph: AAPImages/ALIVEpress/dpa/Corbis
Michael Douglas – the
star of Basic Instinct and Fatal Attraction – has revealed that his throat cancer was apparently caused by
performing oral sex.
In a surprisingly frank interview with the Guardian, the actor,
now winning plaudits in the Liberace biopic Behind the Candelabra, explained
the background to a condition that was thought to be nearly fatal when
diagnosed three years ago. Asked whether he now regretted his years of smoking
and drinking, usually thought to be the cause of the disease, Douglas replied:
"No. Because without wanting to get too specific, this particular cancer
is caused by HPV [human papillomavirus], which actually comes about from
cunnilingus."
Douglas, the husband of Catherine Zeta Jones, continued:
"I did worry if the stress caused by my son's incarceration didn't help
trigger it. But yeah, it's a sexually transmitted disease that causes cancer.
And if you have it, cunnilingus is also the best cure for it."
The actor, now 68, was diagnosed with cancer in August 2010,
following many months of oral discomfort. But a series of specialists missed
the tumour and instead prescribed antibiotics. Douglas then went to see a
friend's doctor in Montreal who looked inside his mouth using a tongue
depressor.
"I will always remember the look on his face,"
Douglas has previously said. "He said: 'We need a biopsy.' There was a
walnut-size tumour at the base of my tongue that no other doctor had
seen."
Shortly afterwards he was diagnosed with stage four cancer, which is
often terminal, and embarked on an intensive eight-week course of chemotherapy
and radiation. He refused to use a feeding tube, despite his palate being burnt
on account of the treatment, and so lost 20kg (45lb) on a liquids-only diet.
"That's a rough ride. That can really take it out of you," he told
the Guardian. "Plus the amount of chemo I was getting, it zaps all the
good stuff too. It made me very weak."
The treatment worked and Douglas is now more than two years clear of
cancer. He has check-ups every six months, he said, "and with this kind of
cancer, 95% of the time it doesn't come back".
The cause of Douglas's cancer had long been assumed to be related to
his tobacco habit, coupled with enthusiastic boozing. In 1992, he was
hospitalised for an addiction which some at the time claimed to be sex. Douglas
himself denied this and said he was in rehab for alcohol abuse. He has also
spoken of recreational drug use.
HPV, the sexually transmitted virus best known as a cause of cervical
and anal cancer and genital warts, is thought to be responsible for an
increasing proportion of oral cancers.
Some suggest that changes in sexual behaviour – a rise in oral sex in
particular – are responsible. Such changes might be cultural, but could also be
linked to fears about the safety of penetrative sex in the wake of the Aids
epidemic.
Mahesh
Kumar, a consultant head and neck surgeon in London, confirmed that the
last decade has seen a dramatic rise in this form of cancer, particularly among
younger sufferers. Recent studies of 1,316 patients with oral cancer found that
57% of them were HPV-16 positive.
"It has been established beyond reasonable doubt that the HPV type
16 is the causative agent in oropharyngeal cancer," said Kumar, who also
testified to increased recovery rates among this kind of cancer sufferer. This
would help explain why Douglas was given an 80% chance of survival, despite the
advanced stage of his illness.
But Kumar expressed scepticism that Douglas's cancer was caused solely
by HPV, and surprise at Douglas's assertion that cunnilingus could also help
cure the condition. "Maybe he thinks that more exposure to the virus will
boost his immune system. But medically, that just doesn't make sense."
Ann
Robinson, a GP, expressed interest in how confirmation of this association
would affect the rollout of the HPV vaccine, which is currently restricted in
the UK. "My main priority with diagnosing a patient with oral cancer is to
get them referred, as early intervention can be so crucial. Asking for a
detailed sexual history would be inappropriate at that stage."
Douglas has two children, aged 10 and 12, with his second wife, Zeta
Jones, as well as an older son, Cameron, from a previous marriage. In 2010,
Cameron was sentenced to five years in prison for drugs possession and dealing,
and a year later had his sentence extended until 2018 after he pleaded guilty
to possessing drugs in prison.
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