The complete ACS recommendations address several different groups:
The new recommendations are in line with those issued by federal health officials after the vaccine was approved last summer.
Potential for Preventing Many Cervical Cancers
Cervical cancer screening with the Pap test has greatly reduced the incidence of this cancer in the United States. The greatest impact of the vaccine is likely to be in groups where screening levels are low, such as in medically underserved populations. The vaccine may prove especially helpful in other countries where cervical cancer screening is not routinely done.
Giving the vaccine to young girls is important, the new guidelines say, because it works best when given to people before they ever become infected with HPV. Because the types of HPV that cause cervical cancer are sexually transmitted, girls should get vaccinated well before they become sexually active.
Surveys of US teens show that nearly a quarter of them have had sex by age 15, and 70% have had sex by age 18.
Most people become infected with HPV at some point in their lives, but the infection usually clears up on its own without ever causing any symptoms. Only rarely does the infection linger in the body and cause cancer. The American Cancer Society estimates there will be about 11,150 cases of cervical cancer in the US in 2007. About 3,670 women will die from the disease.
Widespread vaccination promises to reduce the number of people with diseases caused by HPV, the guidelines say. Over the long term (it can take up to 20 years for an HPV infection to cause cervical cancer) that will mean fewer cases of cervical cancer. In the short term, it will mean fewer cases of genital warts, and less need for procedures (like biopsies) used to treat pre-cancerous changes in the cervix.
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