Cervical cancer vaccine success

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Wednesday, 20 November, 2002, 11:46 GMT

A vaccine to protect women from one of the biggest cancer killers could be available within five years.

Early clinical trials of a vaccine for cervical cancer have shown that it is 100% effective. It also protects against genital warts.

The breakthrough could help to save thousands of lives each year.

Cervical cancer is the second most common cancer in women under 35 in the UK. It claims 1,300 lives each year.

The vaccine works by triggering the body's immune system to attack the human papiloma virus (HPV), which has been linked to almost all cases of cervical cancer.

Further trials

Merck Sharp & Dohme, the company behind the vaccine, said further studies are needed but that it could be available in a few years.

The vaccine would be given to teenage girls. It would only work in females who have not yet become sexually active.

The vaccine fights four of the most common strains of HPV, including a strain that causes genital warts.

Early trials on almost 2,400 women between the ages of 16 and 23 in the United States have shown that it reduced the incidence of HPV by 100% after one year.

Merck Sharp & Dohme is now recruiting 6,000 women worldwide to take part in phase three trials.

These will include 250 women at centres in Glasgow, London and Nottingham.

If the trials are successful the company will then be able to apply for a licence to manufacture and sell the vaccine.

A company spokeswoman told BBC News Online: "Recruitment is currently under way in three centres in the UK. If these phase three trials are successful then we may have a vaccine within several years."

Dr Anne Szarewksi, a clinical consultant at Cancer Research UK, described the results as "very exciting".

"These results look very, very good. People have been trying to get a vaccine for years and years," she told BBC News Online.

"This is really the holy grail of cancer research. It is very exciting."

But Dr Szarewski warned that the vaccine would not help women who have already become sexually active.

"This vaccine would have to be given to teenage or young girls who haven't become sexually active yet.

"An entire generation who have already become sexually active would not benefit."

But she added: "Once it does become available to a new generation of women then I see a situation where they will no longer have to have smear tests."

HPVs are a group of more than 80 different types of virus. They can be transmitted through sexual intercourse and have been linked to cervical cancer.

It is estimated that up to 15% of women aged 20 to 30 women and up to 6% of women over 40 carry the virus. The majority do not go on to develop cancer.

-- Anonymous, November 20, 2002


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