http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/english/health/newsid_1664000/1664241.stm
Monday, 19 November,
2001, 11:00 GMT

A smear
test can pick out cancerous cells
The vaccine
which wiped out the deadly disease smallpox is now being targeted against a
virus responsible for cervical cancers.
The vaccine fuelled the most successful ever
disease eradication programme - several million people received it during the
1970s.
Now, scientists in Cardiff are starting a
small-scale clinical trial to see if a modified version of the vaccine can
raise the body's defences against human papillomavirus (HPV).
This virus is widely thought to be somehow
key to the development of the majority of cervical cancers.
Nearly all cervical cancer cells contain the
HPV virus in one form or another.
Each year, more than 3,000 women in the UK
are diagnosed with cervical cancer.
Small trial
The Welsh trial - funded by the Cancer
Research Campaign - follows testing of the new vaccine on almost a hundred
people across Europe.
This trial represents
an important step from the lab to the clinic
Professor Gordon McVie, Cancer Research Campaign
The researchers hope to
recruit 20 women who have tested positive for pre-cancerous cells during
routine screening.
It is hoped that the new vaccine will
stimulate the immune system to attack all cervical cells which have been
infected with HPV - thus destroying cancerous cells.
Dr Stephen Man, from the University of
Wales, said: "It's crucial that the immune response can find its way from
the bloodstream to the affected cells in the cervix, where it's needed.
"Otherwise it's like being given a fast
car, but not knowing where you're supposed to be going."
Rich history
While some vaccines contain weakened
versions of the same virus which causes disease, the smallpox vaccine is
constructed from a similar virus, vaccinia, which does not cause disease in
humans.
To tailor it to trigger an attack on
HPV-infected cells, molecules produced by this virus are inserted into the
vaccine.
Professor Gordon McVie, Director General of
the Cancer Research Campaign, acknowledged that there was much work to be
completed before a reliable cervical cancer vaccine could be mass-produced for
women.
He said: "This trial represents an
important step from the lab to the clinic.
"When Edward Jenner frist developed the
smallpox vaccine back in 1796, he could never have imagined that it would still
have such an impact on our health over two centuries later."
Related to this story:
Twenty
years free of smallpox (05 May 00 | Health) Aids
vaccine shows promise (08 Mar 01 | Health) Cancer
vaccines 'could save millions' (22 Oct 01 | Health) Virus
peril of changing partners (19 Jun 01 | Health) Cervical
screening 'reducing cancer' (11 May 01 | Health) A
survivor's story: cervical cancer (17 Mar 00 | C-D) Human
Papillomavirus (26 Aug 99 | Medical notes)
Internet links: Cancer Research
Campaign | Imperial Cancer Research Fund | Smallpox eradication |
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