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Most women in low-income countries do not have access to routine screening: only 5 percent have undergone a Pap smear in the past five years.1 In parts of Latin America and the Caribbean, more women die from cervical cancer than from complications of childbirth. Recently, several countries, including China, Costa Rica, and India, have begun campaigns to combat cervical cancer, introducing low-cost screening techniques such as visual inspection with acetic acid or iodine. With these techniques, precancerous cells temporarily change color, enabling practitioners to identify and treat abnormal lesions in a single visit, thus minimizing loss to follow-up. Some of these countries are also investigating a blood test for human papillomavirus (HPV) to identify high-risk strains that lead to cervical cancer.
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The introduction of the HPV vaccine may assist prevention campaigns by reducing the spread of high-risk strains of the virus (HPV types 16 and 18). Although there appears to be regional heterogeneity in the prevalence of high-risk types, many still hope that the HPV vaccine will revolutionize cervical-cancer prevention programs.3 Unfortunately, the women who are most in need may have the hardest time getting vaccinated, since the vaccine, at an estimated $300 to $500 per course, may be too expensive for many developing countries.
In addition to cost, there is the worry that the vaccine could have a negative effect on screening offering false security to vaccinated women, who may incorrectly believe that they no longer need to undergo Pap smears. Although future prevention efforts may focus on optimizing the HPV vaccine or developing targeted molecular tests to prevent the spread of the virus, most experts believe that these advances will not make screening tools obsolete, since millions of women have already been exposed to HPV. Instead, they argue, it will be crucial to make simplified screening and widespread vaccination the new standard of care.
Source Information
Drs. Katz and Wright are editorial fellows at the Journal.
References
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