HPV Vaccine Update: Good News genre: Little Red Ribbon-Hood

Reuters is reporting good news on the vaccine that protects women against the virus (HPV) that is linked to cervical cancer. The vaccine has been submitted to the FDA for approval but it is likely to create significant controversy as many religious organizations are opposed to vaccinating young girls out of concern that it promotes sexual permissiveness and diminishes the message of abstinence only programs. Given the delays by the FDA on other health issues related to sex including the new day after contraceptive pill and the Bush administrations promotion of abstinence programs in Africa to prevent the spread of AIDS, the vaccine is likely to receive ample political attention…unfortunately. This should be a simple matter of protecting women’s health. Read the Reuters article below.

LONDON (Reuters) - A vaccine that protects women against a virus that causes cervical cancer is effective for more than four years, researchers said on Thursday.

They found that women given GlaxoSmithKline Plc’s cervical cancer vaccine Cervarix had high levels of antibodies against two of types of the human papillomavirus (HPV) for up to 4.5 years after receiving their last dose.

“These findings set the stage for widescale adoption of HPV vaccination for prevention of cervical cancer,” said Dr Diane Harper, of Dartmouth Medical School in New Hampshire, who conducted the trial.

Cervical is one of the most common cancers in women. Each year 470,000 women around the world are diagnosed with the disease and 230,000, mostly in the developing world, die, according to the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) in Lyon, France.

HPV is s sexually transmitted infection. Strains 16 and 18 of the virus are responsible for more than 70 percent of cervical cancers.

Results of a European survey released on Wednesday of more than 1,500 women in five EU countries showed that only 5 percent could identify HPV as the cause of cervical cancer.

Harper and her team followed up 800 women who took part in the original trial of the vaccine in which it was compared to a placebo. Their research is published online by The Lancet medical journal.

Women given the vaccine not only had high levels of antibodies against HPV-16 and HPV-18 but the levels did not decrease over time.

The vaccine also protected against new and persistent infections and was effective against HPV-45 and HPV-31, the third and fourth most prevalent cancer-causing types of the virus.

“The results show sustained immune response and long-term efficacy against HPV-16 and HPV-18 infection,” Harper added.

Glaxo submitted the vaccine to the European Medicines Agency for approval in March. But Merck & Co. Inc’s Gardasil vaccine was filed for marketing approval in Europe and the United States last December.

Merck is marketing the vaccine in partnership with Sanofi-Aventis in Europe.

Daniel | April 05, 2006 | 06:17 PM

Comments

1 On April 06, 2006 at 01:13 PM, shawn wrote —

There was a good story about the relatively new (at least in modern times)phenomenon of politicizing science a couple of weeks ago in the New Yorker. This vaccine is sited as but one instance in which the current administration has undermined not only science in general, but public health as well.

2 On April 06, 2006 at 01:52 PM, Daniel wrote —

Shawn,

Thanks for the comments and I will track down a copy of the New Yorker to read the article you reference. The mixing of theology and politics with science is a real concern.

Post a comment

Remember Me?  

(you may use HTML tags for style)

Trackback Pings

TrackBack URL for this entry


© Copyright 2024

Casting

Read about the Director and Cast

Send us an email

Box Office



RSS 2.0

Powered by:
Movable Type 3.2

© Copyright 2024