Herpes,
HPV May Spell Cervical Cancer
Study finds combo may
create higher risk for women
New research suggests
that herpes and another common sexually transmitted virus can be
a deadly combination, raising the risk that infected women will
develop cervical cancer.
The findings seem to explain
why some women are more prone to cervical cancer.
"We know that HPV (human
papillomavirus) causes cancer, but a lot of people have HPV and
never get cancer," explains Stephen E. Hawes, an assistant professor
of epidemiology at the University of Washington at Seattle and author
of a commentary on the new study.
Pap
Tests Stop Disease In Its Tracks
An estimated 13,000 American
women fall victim to cervical cancer each year and 4,100 will die,
according to the American Cancer Society. However,
tests known as Pap smears (also called Pap tests) let many more
stop the disease in its tracks before it becomes serious. Deaths
from the cancer dropped by 74 percent from 1955 to 1992, after the
tests became popular.
Scientists think at least
90 percent of cervical cancer cases are caused by HPV, which may
be the most common sexually transmitted disease. HPV causes inflammation,
which makes the cervix more hospitable to cancerous cells by preventing
them from dying naturally, Hawes explains.
"This process can take
years to develop—20 to 30 years after you have your initial
HPV infection," he says.
Herpes
Makes Matters Worse
Some scientists have suspected
that herpes could make things worse. An international group of researchers
tested that theory by examining medical records from seven countries
of 1,263 women with cervical cancer and 1,117 women free of the
disease.
The findings appeared
in a recent issue of the Journal of the National Cancer
Institute.
The researchers from the
International Agency for Research on Cancer found
signs of infection with herpes simplex virus 2 in about 44 percent
of the women with cancer, but only in 26 percent of the other women.
They also found HPV in
nearly 95 percent of the women with cancer, but only in 15 percent
of the healthy women. Of all women who were infected with HPV, herpes
increased their risk of cervical cancer by two to three times.
Dr. Tom Wright, a pathologist
at Columbia University, says the findings confirm those of a 1991
study in Latin America. However, it is still unclear how herpes
works to make women more susceptible to cervical cancer since the
virus does not cause as much dangerous inflammation, he adds.
There is hope for the
future, however. "The biggest issues right now are the development
of vaccines to prevent infection with high-risk types of HPV and
new molecular tests to identify those women at greatest risk for
developing cervical cancer," he says.
Always consult your physician
for more information.
Online
Resources
(Our Organization is not
responsible for the content of Internet sites.)
American
Cancer Society
American
College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists
CA:
A Cancer Journal for Clinicians
International
Agency for Research on Cancer
Journal
of the National Cancer Institute
National
Institutes of Health
The
New England Journal of Medicine
|
December 2002
Pap
Tests Stop Disease In Its Tracks
Herpes
Makes Matters Worse
New
Cervical Cancer Detection Guidelines Issued
Vaccine
May Avert Cervical Cancer
Online
Resources
In Other Women's Health
News:
New
Cervical Cancer Detection Guidelines Issued
Concerned that many women
are over-screened and over-treated for possible cases of cervical
cancer, the American Cancer Society has issued
new guidelines that revise standards for when and how often women
should get early detection tests.
Under the new guidelines:
-
Cervical cancer
screening should begin about three years after a woman begins
having vaginal intercourse, but no later than at age 21.
-
A Pap test should
be performed every two years. At or after age 30, women with
three consecutive normal Pap tests may get screened every
two to three years. A physician may want to screen more frequently
if a woman has the HIV virus that causes AIDS, or if she has
other conditions that leave her with a weakened immune system.
-
Women 70 or older
with at least three normal Pap test results and no abnormal
ones in the last 10 years can choose to stop cervical cancer
screening.
-
Screening after
a total hysterectomy—including removal of the cervix—is
unnecessary, unless the procedure was performed as a result
of cervical cancer. Women who have had a hysterectomy that
does not include removal of the cervix should be screened
according to the guidelines above.
The new guidelines are
published in the November/December issue of CA: A Cancer
Journal for Clinicians.
Always consult your physician
for more information.
Vaccine
May Avert Cervical Cancer
The likelihood that cervical
cancer will become less of a killer has taken a huge step forward.
Researchers report a perfect
success rate for a vaccine against a virus responsible for half
of all cases of the disease, which is the second-leading cause of
cancer deaths among women worldwide.
More than 30 varieties
of the human papillomavirus (HPV) have a clear link to cancer. While
most cases of HPV resolve on their own, the remaining ones are responsible
for over 90 percent of all cervical cancers.
HPV-16, the variety for
which the vaccine was created, infects 20 percent of adults. HPV-16
is also the strain most commonly linked to cancer, and is present
in 50 percent of all cervical cancers.
The results appear in
a recent issue of The New England Journal of Medicine.
Another article in the same issue of the journal, however, reports
a lower level of effectiveness for a vaccine against herpes simplex
virus type 2 (genital herpes): The vaccine was 73 percent to 74
percent effective for women.
Genital herpes affects
one in five women in the United States, but does not lead to cancer.
Always consult your physician
for more information.
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