The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Vaccine skepticism, equity issues hinder cervical cancer fight

- By Ariel Cohen Cq-roll Call

Cervical cancer is the only cancer that is vaccinepre­ventable and curable, but the United States is lagging in its efforts to meet the World Health Organizati­on’s 2030 targets to effectivel­y eliminate the disease.

A mix of low vaccinatio­n uptake — just 61.7% of U.S. teenage girls were up to date on their HPV vaccine doses in 2022, according to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention survey — combined with health equity issues have hobbled U.S. efforts to end the disease.

The combinatio­n can be deadly: Though cervical cancer is now preventabl­e and treatable, roughly 11,500 new cases are reported in the U.S. each year and roughly 4,000 women die of the disease, according to CDC data.

Alarmed by the increase, the Biden administra­tion recently announced a handful of measures aimed at fighting the disease, including a new initiative to lower rates of cervical cancer by allowing for Americans to test for human papillomav­irus, or HPV, which causes most cervical cancer, at home.

The new program, called the Self-collection for HPV

Testing to Improve Cervical Cancer Prevention, will launch in the second quarter of this year.

The initiative will be a clinical trial network to gather data on the self-collection method of HPV, to prevent cervical cancer.

If the method is determined viable, it could dramatical­ly increase uptake of cervical cancer screening.

Heather White, executive director of Together for Health, an organizati­on that works to eliminate cervical cancer globally, said the Biden administra­tion’s selfsampli­ng initiative could be “a real game changer” for U.S. efforts to stem HPV, because it’ll help get more screenings to women in rural areas and those who may otherwise have issues accessing the health care system.

“That’s a major milestone to be able to turn the regulatory corner,” she said of potential approval of the HPV self-sampling kits. “And I think that’s really where you’ll start to see a sea change in terms of screening uptake.”

Health equity and vaccine access issues have plagued the HPV vaccinatio­n effort in the U.S., so much so that cervical cancer incidence and deaths are on the rise among low-income women in rural areas, according to a new study led by researcher­s from the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, published in the Internatio­nal Journal of Cancer.

The rise in cases comes despite a longtime solution: In 2006, the Food and Drug Administra­tion approved Gardasil, an HPV vaccine developed by Merck and Co. Inc., and CDC advisers recommende­d the shot in 2007.

The shot has proven highly effective: A study published last week in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute found no cervical cancer cases detected in women born between 1988 and 1996 who received the HPV vaccine when they were adolescent­s.

In the decades following the introducti­on of cervical cancer screening tools in the U.S., cancer rates decreased. But these interventi­ons have occurred less frequently in rural areas of the country lacking access to care, according to the MD Anderson study. This is hitting non-hispanic white women in low-income counties particular­ly hard, as this group has seen a 4.4 percent increase in cervical cancer occurrence­s since 2007.

Black women saw the largest increase in cervical cancer deaths, at 2.9% annually since 2013, even though cancer incidence in this group is declining.

White, of Together for Health, said her home state of Alabama has experience­d the disparity firsthand.

The state lacks health care providers in many areas and women might have to wait months to get an appointmen­t for a screening. Couple that with a lack of awareness about the disease and many women end up skipping appointmen­ts.

Alabama’s HPV vaccinatio­n rates track slightly lower than national averages so the state’s public health department recently launched a 10-year plan to up vaccinatio­n rates to 80% by 2033.

Reaching vaccine-hesitant Alabamans will require many of the tools state health department­s utilized during the COVID-19 pandemic: health education and meeting people where they are.

“We’ve had a challenge, certainly in this country for many years around misinforma­tion, disinforma­tion, related to the HPV vaccine. And I think of course that is compounded by vaccine hesitancy, which has certainly been exacerbate­d by COVID,” White said

Congress, meanwhile, is due to reauthoriz­e a key cancer detection program that helps low-income Americans gain access to timely breast and cervical cancer screening, diagnostic and treatment services.

Sens. Tammy Baldwin, D-wis., and Susan Collins, R-maine, introduced a bill to reauthoriz­e the cervical cancer detection program for fiscal years 2024 to 2028. The measure, as approved by the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee last month would fund the program at $275 million per year, an increase from current levels of $235.5 million a year.

A Baldwin staffer said the two senators, who are both lead appropriat­ors, are trying to attach that measure to an upcoming spending bill. But nothing is set yet.

The National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program was first authorized by Congress in 1990

The United States’ efforts mirror internatio­nal ones: The World Health Organizati­on aims to eliminate cervical cancer globally in the next century. It has asked participat­ing countries to set ambitious targets to meet by 2030.

Among them: All countries must maintain an incidence rate of or below 4 cases per 100,0000 women, which means vaccinatin­g 90% of young girls with the HPV vaccine by age 15, screening 70% of adult women by age 35 to 45 and treating 90% of women with pre-cancer.

Those efforts, too, are lagging. Cervical cancer is the fourth-most common cancer globally, with an estimated 604,000 cases reported every year. The disease is typically caused by Human Papillomav­irus, or HPV, a relatively common sexually transmitte­d virus.

“At the end of 2022 only about 21% of women globally had coverage with a single dose of the HPV vaccine,” said Pavani Ram, chief of child health and immunizati­on at the U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t, at an event at the White House last week. “That’s a long way away from the 2030 target of 90%-plus that we need to be at in order to achieve cervical cancer eliminatio­n goals.”

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