Previous work in our department demonstrated a reduction in the numbers of Langerhans' cells in cervical epithelium showing histologic changes of human papillomavirus (HPV) infection and cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN). In conjunction with a localized reversal of the T4:T8 ratio of T-lymphocytes, that finding provides evidence of the association of epithelial immunosuppression with both HPV infection and CIN. To investigate whether that phenomenon occurs primarily because of HPV alone or might be caused by a cofactor (e.g., cigarette smoking, oral contraceptive use, chlamydial infection), we performed a study of the effect of those cofactors on the immune defenses of the cervical epithelium. In a study of Langerhans' cells we showed that infection with HPV type 16 and current cigarette smoking both exert effects that cause a reduction in those cells. That diminution of the major antigen-presenting cells in cervical epithelium may constitute a mechanism that explains the observed role of those agents in the etiology of cervical neoplasia.