Doctors Laud Cervical Cancer Vaccine
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_____Special Report_____
Cancer
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By Jeff Donn
Associated Press Writer
Wednesday, November 20, 2002; 2:51 PM
BOSTON Early testing shows an experimental vaccine to be 100 percent
effective against the virus that causes cervical cancer, raising doctors'
hopes of someday sending the lethal disease into retreat in the same way as
smallpox and polio.
"It appears to be the real thing," said Dr. Christopher Crum, a
pathologist at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. "You're looking at
some very compelling evidence that this vaccine will prevent cervical
cancer."
It remains unclear how long the protection might last. Even so,
researchers say a vaccine could reach the market within five years or so.
The findings were published in Thursday's New England Journal of
Medicine.
Vaccines work by teaching the body's immune defenses to recognize
invading viruses and bacteria. Most types of cancer, by contrast, are blamed
largely on genetic mutations and environmental factors. However, virtually
all cases of cervical cancer are caused by a sexually transmitted virus
the human papilloma virus.
A vaccine for cervical cancer is urgently being sought because the
disease strikes about 450,000 women worldwide each year, killing about half.
It is the leading cancer killer of women in the developing world. In the
United States, where Pap tests are widely used for screening, it develops in
about 15,000 women annually and kills about a third.
The new vaccine, aimed at the viral strain Type 16 responsible for about
half the cases of cervical cancer, was tested on women ages 16 to 23 at 16
sites around the country in a study led by Merck & Co. and the University of
Washington. Merck developed the vaccine and funded the research. The women
were watched on average for almost a year and a half.
Of 768 women who got vaccine injections, none showed Type 16 infections
or precancerous tissue. Of 765 who took dummy injections, 41 came down with
persistent infections, and nine developed precancerous tissue.
Inoculated women built up almost 60 times the concentration of
virus-fighting antibodies seen in naturally infected women. Some researchers
had suspected that the mucous membrane on the cervix would pose a barrier to
such antibodies.
"For us, this is proof of principle," said Merck researcher Kathrin
Jansen. "There was a lot of doubt in the beginning not by me, but by
others that said it would be very difficult to prevent infection."
In an accompanying editorial, Crum said the vaccines developed to fight
diseases like smallpox and polio are now reference points in medical
history.
"If the promise implicit in the study ... is realized, we could, in our
lifetime, see the gradual but progressive dismantling to the barriers to
preventing cervical cancer," he said.
However, in part because cervical cancer is caused by multiple strains,
it is not clear whether the disease can ever be wiped out.
Laura Koutsky, a disease specialist at the University of Washington, also
cautioned: "We really only know about the short-term duration of the
antibodies. Whether the antibodies persist for five years or more is not
known at this point."
Dr. Douglas Lowy, a National Cancer Institute researcher, agreed that
patients must be tested over longer times. But he and others agreed that a
vaccine probably one targeted at multiple viral strains encompassing the
vast share of cases might reach market fairly quickly.
Such a vaccine could also stop other harm done by the virus, including
genital warts in both men and women and rare forms of penile, anal, vaginal
and oral cancer. Researchers said the vaccine might also be taken by men to
keep them from infecting their female partners.
A vaccine is already used to combat the hepatitis B virus, a sexually
transmitted agent blamed for some cases of liver cancer.
On the Net:
National Cervical Cancer Coalition: http://www.nccc-online.org
Cervical cancer homepage of National Cancer Institute: http://www.nci.nih.gov/cancerinfo/types/cervical
© 2002 The Associated Press
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