HPV vaccination reduces cervical abnormalities in young women, study finds
TORONTO — Young women immunized against human papilloma virus were significantly less likely to have potentially cancerous cervical abnormalities compared to those who didn’t receive the HPV vaccine, a study of more than 10,000 subjects has found.
In a study published Monday in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, Alberta researchers found that young women who were immunized as girls against the sexually transmitted virus as part of a school-based inoculation program had a 50 per cent lower risk of having cervical-cell anomalies than their unvaccinated counterparts.
Among vaccinated women in the study, Pap screening showed 11.8 per cent had abnormal cervical cells, compared to 16.1 per cent of those who hadn’t been immunized against HPV.
“Our study demonstrated that HPV vaccinations are highly effective in reducing cervical cell abnormalities, particularly against the high-grade lesions which have the potential to become cancerous later in life,” said principal investigator Dr. Huiming Yang, medical director of screening programs at Alberta Health Services.