HPV vaccine prevents genital warts in males
For the first time, an expensive vaccine aimed at preventing cervical cancer in women has proven successful at preventing a disease in men, according to a study. The disease is genital warts — sexually transmitted, embarrassing and uncomfortable — but not life-threatening.
Still, the results are expected to bolster a likely bid by the vaccine’s manufacturer, Merck & Co Inc, to begin marketing the vaccine to boys, experts said. Merck plans to ask the government for that approval later this year. “This opens the door to a wonderful opportunity to prevent illness,” said Anna Giuliano, a researcher at the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center , who worked on the Merck study. The research results were being presented Thursday at a medical conference in Europe.
The vaccine targets the two types of HPV, or human papillomavirus, believed to be responsible for about 70 percent of cervical cancer cases, and two other types that cause most genital warts. HPV is spread through sex. In 2006, the US government licensed the vaccine for use in girls and women ages 9 to 26. Males can spread the virus, but the vaccine was not licensed for them because there was no evidence it prevented disease in men.
The new study involved about 4,000 males ages 16 to 26 in nearly 20 countries. Results showed the vaccine was 90 percent effective in preventing genital warts, with only 15 cases of persistent infection in the vaccinated group, compared to 101 cases in a group that was given a fake vaccine.
No serious side effects were reported. The research is continuing, but these results reflect how the men were doing about 30 months after the injections, on average. The results are ‘very exciting,’ but it’s not clear they will be enough to persuade many American families to get their teenage boys vaccinated, said Dr. Maura Gillison, an HPV researcher at Johns Hopkins University who was not involved in the Merck study.
She noted that only 1 in 4 girls have gotten the vaccine so far, despite compelling medical studies that indicate the shots prevent female cancers.
Government officials have been awaiting this interim analysis from Merck. They are eager to see additional information that may come later on the vaccine’s effect on precancerous lesions, said Dr. Lauri Markowitz, an HPV expert at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “It’s obviously encouraging data, but the policy makers will be looking at a variety of different issues,” including how cost-effective the shot would be if used in males, said Markowitz, a medical epidemiologist.
HPV causes at least 20,000 cases of cancer in the US each year. Cervical cancer is the most common type, but about a quarter of cancers occur in men, including penile, anal and even head and neck cancers. ap
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