Giving the HPV vaccine to schoolgirls slashes their risk of getting cervical cancer by 88%, major study claims
- The Swedish study is the biggest one to evaluate the success of the vaccine
- They tracked 1.7million women over 11 years — around a third had had the jab
- Rates of cervical cancer were lower in women vaccinated before the age of 17
Giving the HPV vaccine to schoolgirls slashes cervical cancer rates by 88 per cent, a study has revealed.
In the biggest study yet to evaluate the success of the vaccine, experts followed 1.7million women over 11 years, including half a million who received the jab.
They found that rates of cervical cancer were 88 per cent lower in women who were vaccinated before the age of 17, and 50 per cent lower in older women who had been immunised.
The HPV vaccine prevents infection from human papillomavirus, a common group of viruses that are behind 90 per cent of cases of cervical cancer.
In the biggest study yet to evaluate the success of the vaccine, experts followed 1.7million women over 11 years, including half a million who received the jab
It has been given to teenage girls in UK since 2008, and was last year made available to schoolboys at the age of 12 and 13 for the first time.
Currently 3,200 cases of cervical cancer are diagnosed every year in Britain, leading to more than two deaths a day.
But this research suggests cervical cancer cases will drop sharply over the next few years as more and more people are vaccinated, with experts hopeful the disease could eventually be eliminated.
Co-author Professor Pär Sparén, from the Department of Medical Epidemiology at the Karolinska Institutet in Sweden, said: ‘Girls vaccinated at a young age seem to be more protected, probably because they are less likely to have been exposed to HPV infection and given that HPV vaccination has no therapeutic effect against a pre-existing infection.
‘Our study shows that HPV vaccination may significantly reduce the risk of cervical cancer, especially if completed at an early age.
‘Our data strongly supports continuing HPV vaccinations of children and adolescents through national vaccination programs.’
Of the 1.7million women included in the study, just 19 vaccinated women were diagnosed with cervical cancer compared to 538 unvaccinated women.
Robert Music, chief executive of Jo’s Cervical Cancer Trust, said: ‘The HPV vaccine is an important tool in the fight against cervical cancer.
‘Sadly Covid-19 has disrupted many vaccination programmes and led to increased vaccine hesitancy.
‘We must ensure those eligible do not miss out on the opportunity to reduce their cervical cancer risk and communicating the benefits of the vaccine is essential.
‘For countries without a HPV vaccination programme, this data should help to demonstrate the impact it could bring.’
The research was published New England Journal of Medicine.