Early adoption of innovation in HPV prevention strategies: closing the gap in cervical cancer

Cervical cancer (CC) is one of the highest prevailing causes of female cancer-related mortality globally. A significant discrepancy in incidence has been noted between high and low-middle-income countries. The origins of CC have been accredited to the human papillomavirus (HPV) with serotypes 16 and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecancermedicalscience 2024-09, Vol.18, p.1762
Hauptverfasser: Mahajan, Ishika, Kadam, Amogh, McCann, Lucy, Ghose, Aruni, Wakeham, Katie, Dhillon, Navjot Singh, Stanway, Susannah, Boussios, Stergios, Banerjee, Soirindhri, Priyadarshini, Ashwini, Sirohi, Bhawna, Torode, Julie S, Mitra, Swarupa
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container_title Ecancermedicalscience
container_volume 18
creator Mahajan, Ishika
Kadam, Amogh
McCann, Lucy
Ghose, Aruni
Wakeham, Katie
Dhillon, Navjot Singh
Stanway, Susannah
Boussios, Stergios
Banerjee, Soirindhri
Priyadarshini, Ashwini
Sirohi, Bhawna
Torode, Julie S
Mitra, Swarupa
description Cervical cancer (CC) is one of the highest prevailing causes of female cancer-related mortality globally. A significant discrepancy in incidence has been noted between high and low-middle-income countries. The origins of CC have been accredited to the human papillomavirus (HPV) with serotypes 16 and 18 being the most prevalent. HPV vaccines, with 90%-97% efficacy, have proven safe and currently function as the primary prevention method. In addition, secondary prevention by timely screening can potentially increase the 5-year survival rate by >90%. High-precision HPV DNA testing has proven to be both highly sensitive and specific for early detection and is advocated by the WHO. Lack of public awareness, poor screening infrastructure and access to vaccines, socio-cultural concerns, along with economic, workforce-associated barriers and the presence of marginalised communities unable to access services have contributed to a continued high incidence. This article comprehensively analyses the efficacy, coverage, benefits and cost-effectiveness of CC vaccines and screening strategies including the transition from cytological screening to HPV self-sampling, while simultaneously exploring the real-world disparities in their feasibility. Furthermore, it calls for the implementation of population-based approaches that address the obstacles faced in approaching the WHO 2030 targets for CC elimination.
doi_str_mv 10.3332/ecancer.2024.1762
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A significant discrepancy in incidence has been noted between high and low-middle-income countries. The origins of CC have been accredited to the human papillomavirus (HPV) with serotypes 16 and 18 being the most prevalent. HPV vaccines, with 90%-97% efficacy, have proven safe and currently function as the primary prevention method. In addition, secondary prevention by timely screening can potentially increase the 5-year survival rate by &gt;90%. High-precision HPV DNA testing has proven to be both highly sensitive and specific for early detection and is advocated by the WHO. Lack of public awareness, poor screening infrastructure and access to vaccines, socio-cultural concerns, along with economic, workforce-associated barriers and the presence of marginalised communities unable to access services have contributed to a continued high incidence. 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subjects Cervical cancer
Cost analysis
Disease prevention
Fatalities
Human papillomavirus
Industrialized nations
Licenses
Mortality
Public health
Review
Vaccines
Womens health
title Early adoption of innovation in HPV prevention strategies: closing the gap in cervical cancer
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