Cervical cancer jab 'in a year'

A vaccine shown to be 100% effective against two virus strains that
cause most cervical cancer could be available within a year, say
manufacturers.

Gardasil worked against the sexually transmitted human papillomavirus (HPV).

Some 12,167 women aged 16 to 23 from 13 countries, including the UK,
took part in the drug company study.

Researchers believe a vaccine could work best if given before
adolescence, but critics fear this could encourage under-age sex.

Merck's vaccine is in head-to-head competition with a rival from
UK-based GlaxoSmithKline called Cervarix.

Cervical cancer kills 274,000 women worldwide every year, including
1,120 in the UK.

The two-year Future II trial found Gardasil was 100% effective at
preventing early stage cancers and pre-cancerous abnormalities caused
by the two key strains of HPV - the 16 and 18 strains - which cause
70% of cervical cancers.

Similar results were previously seen in a smaller trial of 277 women.

ole0.bmp        These results add to the mounting evidence that
cervical cancer vaccines offer great promise for the future ole1.bmp
Dr Anne Szarewski, Cancer Research UK
Dr Anne Szarewski, clinical consultant at Cancer Research UK, said:
"These results add to the mounting evidence that cervical cancer
vaccines offer great promise for the future.

"It appears we may soon be able to prevent the majority of cases. With
any disease caused by a virus, the best way to stop it is to prevent
it with a vaccine."

However, she said a woman should remember that an abnormal smear
result does not necessarily mean she will go on to get cervical
cancer. Many abnormalities get better on their own and disappear.

Also, she said it would take many more years to know whether a vaccine
continued to offer long term protection and that it was therefore
essential to continue with cervical screening - women attending for
regular smear tests.

Julietta Patnick, director of the NHS Cancer Screening Programmes,
said regular cervical screening was the best way of preventing
cervical cancer.

All women registered with a GP should receive their first invitation
at 25 and then every three years until they are 49. Women between 50
and 64 will be invited every five years.

Licence bids

Cambridge University's Professor Margaret Stanley said: "The results
of Future II are so exciting because of the sheer size of the trial
and the fact that it demonstrated 100% efficacy."

Professor Peter Rigby, chief executive of the Institute of Cancer
Research, was also excited by the findings.

He said: "Nearly 3,000 people in the UK are diagnosed with cervical
cancer each year, so it is very exciting to hear it may be possible to
drastically reduce this number in the foreseeable future."

Gardasil's manufacturers - Sanofi Pasteur and Merck & Co Inc - are
expected to apply for a US Food and Drug Administration licence to
market the vaccine before the end of the year.

This will be followed by a licence application to the European Medicines Agency.

Although HPV is transmitted through sexual intercourse, a vaccine is
likely to be administered to girls as young as 10 to 13 - critics says
this could encourage under-age sex.

Gardasil also acts against HPV strains six and 11 which cause genital warts

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