April 17, 2007 8:00 PM

Does Cervical Cancer Vaccine Benefit Last?

(WebMD)  Two vaccines for preventing cervical cancer, one that is already available and another that is undergoing FDA review, continue to offer nearly 100 percent protection five years following administration,
new research shows.

The findings come at a time when use of the vaccines is being hotly debated, with states grappling with the issue of access to a vaccine for a sexually transmitted disease.

Darron R. Brown, M.D., professor of medicine, microbiology, and immunology at the Indiana University School of Medicine in Indianapolis, says the durability of the protection is an important issue.

"Right now, the data suggest strong sustainability with either vaccine.
We don't know if a booster will be needed, but from what we're seeing, I think the vaccines will provide protection for a lifetime," he tells WebMD.

The vaccines were discussed at the annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research.

Cervical Cancer Vaccines Target HPV

Both vaccines protect against cervical cancer by preventing infection with two strains of human papillomavirus (HPV) — 16 and 18 — that are responsible for up to 70 percent of all cervical cancers.

Gardasil, the approved vaccine, also targets HPV 6 and 11, which account for 90 percent of genital warts — providing the woman has not been previously exposed.

HPV is a sexually transmitted virus, with dozens of strains.

The University of Louisville's Stanley Gall, M.D., who tested Cervarix, the vaccine under review, predicts it will be approved soon. Then it will be up to each person to decide which one fits her needs, he says.

"They're both wonderful products and the family and their doctor will
have to decide which is best," he tells WebMD.

Gall says that younger people are more likely to develop genital warts, so they might decide to opt for the additional protection offered by Gardasil.

Cervical Cancer Vaccine Debate Heats Up

The big, looming issue will not be which vaccine to get, but whether to get it at all, he says. "If we don't get it into people, they won't
benefit," he says.

The FDA approved Gardasil for girls and women aged 9-26. The CDC recommends the vaccine to girls 11-12 years old, but it can be given to girls as young as 9. The CDC also recommends it for 13- to 26-year-old females who haven't already received or completed the vaccine series.

Texas is the only state to mandate the vaccine. Debates in several states on whether to join it have been faced with a backlash, with critics charging that the vaccine promotes promiscuity and denies parents their rights.

Gall, who backs state mandates, says the backlash is appalling given that more than 11,000 new cases of cervical cancer will be diagnosed in 2007, with more than 3,600 deaths, according to figures from the American Cancer Society.

"Patients are always asking, 'Why isn't there a vaccine to prevent
cancer?' Well, now you have a cancer vaccine. The whole idea is to use it," he says.

Gall also thinks states should offer the vaccine for free. "This would
really help us make headway in getting into the population that needs it," he says.

Brown says he doesn't support mandates. "What we need to do is educate
families about the high level of safety and effectiveness of the vaccine. Once they understand that, I think very few would not want their daughters to be immunized," he says.

Noting that Gardasil is also being tested in males — who spread HPV to
their sexual partners — Brown says, "If we ever get FDA approval for use in males, I'd make sure my boy got it."

Duke University's H. Kim Lyerly, M.D., moderator of a news conference on the findings, says the medical community is still trying to figure out whether state mandates or education is the best way to ensure all girls get vaccinated.

Vaccines Protect Against Other HPV Subtypes, Too

The new research presented at the meeting also showed that both Gardasil and Cervarix protect against HPV types 45 and 31, which are together responsible for 10 percent of cervical cancers, Gall says.

"It's not a surprise that the vaccine offers protection against additional types of HPV, as they are all related genetically," he
explains.

Both vaccines also appeared to prevent abnormal, precancerous cell growths found in the cervix, he says.

The Cervarix study, funded by GlaxoSmithKline, which makes the vaccine,
included 1,113 women aged 15 to 25 in North America and Brazil who were given either three doses of the vaccine or a placebo.

The Gardasil study, sponsored by maker Merck & Co., involved 12,167
women aged 16 to 23.
By Charlene Laino
Reviewed by Louise Chang
©2007 WebMD, Inc. All rights reserved

© 2007 WebMD, LLC.. All Rights Reserved.
Add a Comment
by gaye5 April 20, 2007 3:01 AM EDT
Well tucanofulano you sure are awake to things, and good on you for thinking for yourself and finding out what is good and what is not, what is truth and what is not, what is money talking and what is real protection, and no non of us will be taking it either, nor will we have flu shots etc, I dont like making myself sick just so as pharmecutical companies can become rich...and it is strange but my husband and I are the healthiest out of all our many friends, and in all of the school. hmmmm...

Javagirl8, tucanofulano is right it will be a couple of generations before we know if it is really safe, and in the mean time we dont know what effect it will have on us and or children...
I wouldnt marry a man who had slept around... get them young and hang onto them. I did and after 42 years of marriage we still love each other,, he has been a principal of both State and private schools and we were lucky enough to be able to worked together a lot of the time...
Reply to this comment
by tucano2 April 20, 2007 2:05 AM EDT
Firstly-we have no data there are any benefits at all, let alone in any preponderence to outweigh the first negatives we see. It will take 5 to 10 generations before anyone knows much of anything. Wow, talk about rush to judgement, money talks, it not what but whom you know, and all the rest describing an absolutely crooked as well as evil FDA/Big Pharma coziness.
Reply to this comment
by tucano2 April 20, 2007 1:56 AM EDT
None of the 5 girls here will take the vaccine (1) it is made by a firm with a highly questionable ethical component (2) there is NO DATA TO SHOW WHAT DEADLY SIDE-EFFECTS OVER GENERATIONS WILL BE INVOLVED.
Reply to this comment
by javagirl8 April 20, 2007 12:33 AM EDT
I am over 33 years old and do not have HPV. I want to share with you all the quick story of what I saw in college one year.

One year in college I had beautiful *** blonde roommate who slept around a bit and got genital warts and had precervical cancer pap smear. She was told by her Dr to tell partners she was infected but she didn't bother - why ruin her repution or popularity. I was the one who held her when she broke down crying thinking she might have cancer now or soon at the age of 19 do to sexual conduct with some older guy she had summer fling with. I was the one who struggled to keep her confidence when we were no longer roommates and she was sleeping around again.

I am about to get my third shot in the series for Gardasil. I do this for me - because I am single and I know that people hide things they think will make them not as likely to get a date. I don't sleep around - I am celibate in fact and intend to be till marriage. However I know the chances that any partner I pick might be infected is high as what 25 % of the population is infected. The Gardasil shots are the gift I give myself to protect my health - against the possible sexual past of potential marrige partner. If I were already infected it would be too late for me to get the shots - we need to innoculate our children before they reach the age where they might be exposed.
Reply to this comment
by gaye5 April 19, 2007 11:59 PM EDT
The article above says...We don't know if a booster will be needed, but from what we're seeing, I think the vaccines will provide protection for a lifetime," he tells WebMD.
What isn't it properly tested yet to know these things... and who are they testing it on..
THEN....
The FDA approved Gardasil for girls and women aged 9-26.
WHAT... IF children are having ***, then why isn't the powers to be jailing the animals who have *** with these children... they are paedophiles for goodness sake..

What is the reason that the pharmecutical companies are pushing children to have this vaccine???? it couldnt be more money could it...???? these children will then have to have another shot when they are old enough to have ***...
The BBC in 2001 said that, "Experts examining more than a century's records of cervical cancer have found fresh evidence of links to sexual infection"
the human papillomavirus (HPV) - which can be sexually transmitted - plays some role in the development of cervical cancer,
In ten years time the pharmaceutical company will tell us that because of their vaccine for cervical cancers that the cancer rate has drastically reduced, but they will not say that at the same time girls are being more and more careful about *** before marriage....
Reply to this comment
by rohink-2009 April 19, 2007 1:57 PM EDT
We don't know if a booster will be needed, but from what we're seeing, I think the vaccines will provide protection for a lifetime," he tells WebMD.


We don't know and I think are enough to convince me we need more research before we start inoculating young children on a mandatory basis.
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