http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/27/health/27cancer.html?_r=1&ref=health

Fighting Cervical Cancer With Vinegar and Ingenuity
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  a.. 1 a.. 2 a.. 3 a.. 4 a.. 5 a.. 6 a.. 7 a.. 8 a.. 9 a.. 10 a.. 11Anuree 
Talasart, a nurse provider in Roi Et Province, Thailand, teaches a group of 
women about the female reproductive system.
By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr.
Published: September 26, 2011 
POYAI, Thailand — Maikaew Panomyai did a little dance coming out of the 
examination room, switching her hips, waving her fists in the air and crowing, 
in her limited English: “Everything’s O.K.! Everything’s O.K.!” 

Small Fixes
A special section on low-cost innovations that can save thousands of lives.

  a.. Vinegar to Fight Cervical Cancer 
  b.. 
  a.. 
Reader Challenge
  a.. Can You Solve This Global Health Issue?
 
The New York Times
Thailand is a leader in adopting the cryotherapy technique. 

Translation: The nurse just told me I do not have cervical cancer, and even the 
little white spot I had treated three years ago is still gone. 

What allowed the nurse to render that reassuring diagnosis was a remarkably 
simple, brief and inexpensive procedure, one with the potential to do for poor 
countries what the Pap smear did for rich ones: end cervical cancer’s reign as 
the No. 1 cancer killer of women. The magic ingredient? Household vinegar. 

Every year, more than 250,000 women die of cervical cancer, nearly 85 percent 
of them in poor and middle-income countries. Decades ago, it killed more 
American women than any other cancer; now it lags far behind cancers of the 
lung, breast, colon and skin. 

Nurses using the new procedure, developed by experts at the Johns Hopkins 
medical school in the 1990s and endorsed last year by the World Health 
Organization, brush vinegar on a woman’s cervix. It makes precancerous spots 
turn white. They can then be immediately frozen off with a metal probe cooled 
by a tank of carbon dioxide, available from any Coca-Cola bottling plant. 

The procedure is one of a wide array of inexpensive but effective medical 
advances being tested in developing countries. New cheap diagnostic and 
surgical techniques, insecticides, drug regimens and prostheses are already 
beginning to save lives. 

With a Pap smear, a doctor takes a scraping from the cervix, which is then sent 
to a laboratory to be scanned by a pathologist. Many poor countries lack 
high-quality labs, and the results can take weeks to arrive. 

Women who return to distant areas where they live or work are often hard to 
reach, a problem if it turns out they have precancerous lesions. 

Miss Maikaew, 37, could have been one of them. She is a restaurant cashier on 
faraway Ko Chang, a resort island. She was home in Poyai, a rice-farming 
village, for a brief visit and was screened at her mother’s urging. 

The same thing had happened three years ago, and she did have a white spot 
then. (They resemble warts, and are caused by the human papillomavirus.) It was 
frozen off with cryotherapy, which had hurt a little, but was bearable, she 
said. 

Since she has been screened twice in her 30s, her risk of developing cervical 
cancer has dropped by 65 percent, according to studies by the Alliance for 
Cervical Cancer Prevention, a coalition of international health organizations 
funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. 

The procedure, known as VIA/cryo for visualization of the cervix with acetic 
acid (vinegar) and treatment with cryotherapy, can be done by a nurse, and only 
one visit is needed to detect and kill an incipient cancer. 

Thailand has gone further than any other nation in adopting it. More than 20 
countries, including Ghana and Zimbabwe, have done pilot projects. But in 
Thailand, VIA/cryo is now routine in 29 of 75 provinces, and 500,000 of the 8 
million women, ages 30 to 44, in the target population have been screened at 
least once. 

Dr. Bandit Chumworathayi, a gynecologist at Khon Kaen University who helped run 
the first Thai study of VIA/cryo, explains that vinegar highlights the tumors 
because they have more DNA, and thus more protein and less water, than other 
tissue. 

It reveals pre-tumors with more accuracy than a typical Pap smear. But it also 
has more false positives — spots that turn pale but are not malignant. As a 
result, some women get unnecessary cryotherapy. 

But freezing is about 90 percent effective, and the main side effect is a 
burning sensation that fades in a day or two. 

By contrast, biopsies, the old method, can cause bleeding. 

“Some doctors resist” the cryotherapy approach, said Dr. Wachara 
Eamratsameekool, a gynecologist at rural Roi Et Hospital who helped pioneer the 
procedure. “They call it ‘poor care for poor people.’ This is a 
misunderstanding. It’s the most effective use of our resources.” 

At a workshop, nurse trainees pored over flash cards showing cervixes with 
diagnosable problems. They did gynecological exams on lifelike mannequins with 
plastic cervixes. They performed cryotherapy on sliced frankfurters pinned deep 
inside plastic pipes. Then, after lunch, they broke into small groups and went 
by minibus to nearby rural clinics to practice on real women. 

Because cervical cancer takes decades to develop, it is too early to prove that 
Thailand has lowered its cancer rate. In fact, Roi Et Province, where mass 
screening first began, has a rate higher than normal, but doctors attribute 
that to the extra testing. But of the 6,000 women recruited 11 years ago for 
the first trial, not a single one has developed full-blown cancer. 

VIA/cryo was pioneered in the 1990s simultaneously by Dr. Paul D. Blumenthal, 
an American gynecologist working in Africa, and Dr. Rengaswamy Sankaranarayanan 
in India. 

Dr. Blumenthal said he and colleagues at the Johns Hopkins medical school had 
debated ways to make cervical lesions easier to see, and concluded that 
whitening them with acetic acid would be effective. Freezing off lesions is 
routine in gynecology and dermatology; the challenge was making it cheap and 
easy. Liquid nitrogen is hard to get, but carbon dioxide is readily available. 

Thailand seems made for the vinegar technique. It has more than 100,000 nurses 
and a network of rural clinics largely run by them. 

Also, while poor rural villagers in many countries go to shamans or herbalists 
before they see doctors, poor Thais do not. Thailand has a 95 percent literacy 
rate, and doctors are trusted. The king is the son of a doctor and a nurse; his 
father trained at Harvard. One of the royal princesses has a doctorate in 
chemistry and an interest in cancer research. 

But the real secret, Dr. Wachara said, is this: “Thailand has Lady Kobchitt.” 

Dr. Kobchitt Limpaphayon to her colleagues at Bangkok’s Chulalongkorn 
University medical school and “Kobbie” to her classmates long ago at New York’s 
Albany Medical College, she is the gynecologist to the Thai royal family. 
“Kobbie is a force of nature,” said Dr. Blumenthal, who has taught with her. In 
1971, as a young doctor, she moved from Albany to Baltimore to help start the 
Johns Hopkins Program for International Education in Gynecology and Obstetrics. 

In 1999, she read one of Dr. Blumenthal’s papers and asked him to introduce 
VIA/cryo in Thailand. Without her connections and powers of persuasion, said 
Dr. Bandit, it would have been impossible to get the conservative Royal Thai 
College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists to give up Pap smears, or to 
persuade Parliament to allow nurses to do cryotherapy, a procedure previously 
reserved for doctors. 

The free screenings at public clinics are crucial to people like Yupin 
Promasorn, 36, who was part of Miss Maikaew’s group. 

She sells snacks in Bangkok, and her husband drives a tuk-tuk motorcycle taxi. 
With two children, she has no time to wait at Bangkok’s jammed public 
hospitals, and she is too poor to see a private doctor. So she and her husband 
drove the 12 hours here, to her native village, in his tuk-tuk. When she found 
out she was negative, she sat in a chair fanning herself. 

“I feel like a heavy mountain is gone from my chest,” she said. 


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