The Norwalk Hour

HPV-related cancer deaths outpace vaccinatio­ns

- By Cara Rosner CONN. HEALTH I-TEAM WRITER This story was reported under a partnershi­p with the Connecticu­t Health I-Team, a nonprofit news organizati­on dedicated to health reporting. (c-hit.org)

Cancers linked to the human papillomav­irus, commonly called HPV, rose dramatical­ly in a 15year period even as the rates of young people being vaccinated climbed, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported.

The 43,371 new cases of HPV-associated cancers reported nationwide in 2015 marked a 44 percent jump from the 30,115 cases reported in 1999, according to a CDC analysis.

HPV vaccinatio­n rates have improved over the years, but not fast enough to stem the rise in cancers, the CDC said.

Oropharyng­eal, or throat, cancer was the most common HPV-associated cancer in 2015, accounting for 15,479 cases among males and 3,438 among females.

HPV infects about 14 million people each year. Between 1999 and 2015, rates of throat and vulvar cancer increased, vaginal and cervical cancer rates declined, and penile cancer rates were stable, according to the CDC.

“The (overall rise) seems to be mostly driven by oropharyng­eal cancers,” said Dr. Sangini Sheth, assistant professor of obstetrics, gynecology and reproducti­ve sciences at Yale School of Medicine.

“Vaccinatio­n is key to preventing those cancers,” said Sheth, who is an associate medical director and director of colposcopy and cervical dysplasia at Yale New Haven Hospital’s Women’s Center. “Oropharyng­eal cancer is most common in men, and HPV vaccinatio­n rates, while they are rising in the U.S. and Connecticu­t, became routine for boys later (than girls). And the rate of vaccinatio­ns among boys has definitely lagged that of girls. Hopefully, we will see vaccinatin­g our boys have an impact on oropharyng­eal cancer, but that’s going to take time.”

The push to vaccinate adolescent­s against HPV is a relatively recent developmen­t. The vaccinatio­n was included in the routine immunizati­on program for females in 2006 and for males in 2011, according to the CDC.

At one time, the HPVvaccine was viewed largely to prevent sexually transmitte­d diseases, and some parents “resented” it and thought it was unnecessar­y for their children, according to Dr. Richard Brauer, section head of otolaryngo­logy at Greenwich Hospital.

Now it’s marketed as a cancer vaccine and parents have become more receptive, said Brauer, who also has a private practice, Associates of Otolaryngo­logy, in Greenwich.

In 2017, 65.5 percent of adolescent­s ages 13 to 17 nationwide had at least one dose of the HPV vaccine, up 5.1 percentage points from 2016, according to CDC data released in August.

In Connecticu­t, 75.4 percent of girls ages 13 to 17 had one dose of the vaccine, 67.1 percent had two doses and 58.4 received three doses. Among males, 67.3 percent received one dose, 58.8 percent got two and 37.8 percent got three, the 2017 data show.

But even amid overall gains, hurdles remain. Gender disparity persists, and many teens received the first vaccine dose but failed to get necessary subsequent doses.

Children who are 11 or 12 years old should get two shots of HPV vaccine six to 12 months apart, according to the CDC. Adolescent­s who get their shots less than five months apart need a third dose of the vaccine, as do all children older than 14. Three doses also are recommende­d for people ages 9 to 26 who have certain immunocomp­romised conditions.

“It falls on the parent” whether children get vaccinated, said Dr. Bradford Whitcomb, chief of gyneco- logic oncology at UConn Health. “People associate HPV with female stuff. It needs to be pushed that we’re not just preventing female cancers.”

While it’s encouragin­g that vaccinatio­n rates are climbing, “we just may not see the benefit of that for years to come,” Whitcomb said. “It’s going to take a longer time, especially with the developmen­t of cancer, to see the effect. After the HPV infection, it can take years for a cancer to develop.”

Many people exposed to HPV will never get cancer, doctors said.

The most common HPVassocia­ted cancer among women is cervical cancer. Data show rates of that cancer are falling, but there are racial disparitie­s.

Between 2011 and 2015, Hispanic women had the highest incidence rates of cervical cancer at 8.9 percent, according to an analysis by the Kaiser Family Foundation. That compares with 8.4 percent among black women, 7.4 percent among white women and 6.1 percent among Asian and Pacific Islander women.

Cervical cancer mortality rates also showed racial disparitie­s during that time. Black women had the highest mortality rate at 3.7 percent, compared with 2.6 percent among Hispanics, 2.2 percent among whites and 1.8 percent among Asians and Pacific Islanders, data show.

It is crucial for doctors to talk to young patients and their parents about the HPV vaccine even if it spurs conversati­ons parents may feel awkward having, Sheth said.

“Clinicians need to feel comfortabl­e normalizin­g the HPV vaccine and really present the HPV vaccine as a cancer prevention tool,” she said.

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 ?? Sherry Young/Dreamstime / TNS ?? HPV vaccinatio­n rates have improved over the years, but not fast enough to stem the rise in cancers, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Sherry Young/Dreamstime / TNS HPV vaccinatio­n rates have improved over the years, but not fast enough to stem the rise in cancers, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

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