HPV can be sexually transmitted, and it can cause genital
warts and cervical cancer.
This virus often clears on its own, but some strains of HPV are associated with genital
warts and cervical cancer, so it's something that you and your doctor want to be monitoring.
«Although data clearly indicate better immune responses and vaccine efficacy against both genital
warts and cervical dysplasia when vaccination occurs before age 14, this study suggests that HPV vaccination may be effective in reducing abnormal Pap test results even after sexual debut,» explained co-author Rebecca Perkins, MD, MSc, assistant professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Boston University School of Medicine and a gynecologist at Boston Medical Center.
Not exact matches
HPV types 6
and 11, which can cause genital
warts, were detected in 1.3
and 0.1 percent of women, respectively,
and types 16
and 18, which are linked with some cases of
cervical cancer, were present in only 1.5
and 0.8 percent!
There are concerns the vaccine, which guards against four types of the HPV shown to cause
cervical cancer
and anogenital
warts, may give girls a false sense of security about contracting sexually transmitted infections (STIs)
and lead them to engage in riskier sexual activity.
Although it may also lead to genital
warts and certain other cancers,
cervical cancer is by far the most common severe condition related to HPV infection.
«Based on epidemiological studies, the 9vHPV vaccine could prevent approximately 90 percent of
cervical cancer, 90 percent of HPV - related vulvar
and vaginal cancer, 70 to 85 percent of high - grade
cervical disease in females,
and approximately 90 percent of HPV - related anal cancer
and genital
warts in males
and females worldwide,» explained Anna R. Giuliano, Ph.D., Director of the Center for Infection Research in Cancer at Moffitt.
The FDA approved Merck's Gardasil vaccine in 2006, after clinical trials showed that it protects against four strains of human papillomavirus (HPV), which together cause about 70 percent of
cervical cancers
and 90 percent of genital
warts.
HPV infection can cause
cervical, head
and neck,
and anal cancers, plus genital
warts.
HPV is responsible for triggering genital
warts as well as
cervical, vaginal, vulvar, anal,
and oropharyngeal cancers.
HPV is the most common sexually transmitted disease in Canada
and is linked to cancers of the oral cavity, pharynx, penis, anus
and others, in addition to causing
cervical cancer
and anogenital
warts.
Last year the FDA approved Gardasil, a vaccine effective against four strains of human papillomavirus (HPV) that cause 90 percent of genital
warts and 70 percent of all cases of
cervical cancer.
Gardasil protects against two strains responsible for 70 percent of all
cervical cancer cases
and another two that cause noncancerous genital
warts.
The HPV vaccine, which protects against four types of HPV shown to cause
cervical cancer
and anogenital
warts, is offered free through school - based programs to young girls across Canada.
Four HPV strains are responsible for roughly 70 % of
cervical cancer
and about 90 % of genital
warts in women.
Human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine research focuses on the prevention of diseases, such as
cervical cancer
and genital
warts, caused by sexually transmitted human papillomaviruses.
The human papillomavirus (HPV) causes genital
warts and has been found in more than 90 % of
cervical tumors.
«In Australia, for instance, the incidence of genital
warts and precancerous
cervical abnormalities in young women is plummeting.»
Based on the subsequent isolation of papillomavirus types in genital
warts and laryngeal papillomatosis, two of zur Hausen's later students were able to clone
and partially characterize the most prevalent virus types in
cervical cancer, HPV 16 (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 80, 3812, 1983)
and HPV 18 (EMBO Journal 3, 1151, 1984).
Learning what your cervix feels like can better help you spot lumps,
warts, or scarring,
and learning your
cervical fluid can give clues to infections based on changes in smell, color, consistency,
and / or frequency.
The vaccine protects against HPV, which can cause
cervical cancer, other cancers
and genital
warts.
A new vaccine promises to make the virus much more scarce in the future, but HPV is still the number one cause of
cervical cancer
and genital
warts.
In addition to
cervical cancer, HPV can cause genital
warts in men
and women,
and some head
and neck cancers.
Genital herpes has been associated with an increased risk of HIV,
and HPV can cause genital
warts as well as a higher risk of anal,
cervical (in women),
and penile cancers.
Doctors think the throat cancer increase in younger people is linked to the prevalence of human papillomavirus (HPV)-- a common sexually transmitted infection that can also cause herpes, genital
warts,
and, in women,
cervical cancer.
(There are more than 100 HPV strains; some cause genital
warts, others cause
cervical cancer,
and others are harmless.)
And don't freak: Generally, the strains of HPV that cause genital
warts are different from the ones that lead to
cervical cancer.
Gardasil ® has been shown to protect against strains of the human papillomaviruses (HPV) that cause
cervical cancer
and genital
warts.
The HPV vaccine protects you against the 9 types responsible for 90 % of
cervical and anal cancer cases, along with 90 % of genital
warts cases.