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- 13 - accessHealthNews.net January 2024 Volume 10 | Issue No. 80 Nearly 13,000 women are diagnosed with cervical cancer each year; approximately 4000 die. But did you know cervical cancer is one of the few cancers that is almost entirely preventable? Cervical cancer begins with a common sexually transmitted infection of the cervix called human papillomavirus (HPV). Most people who become infected with HPV get it within two to three years of their first sexual activity. A 2014 Sexually Transmitted Diseases article, The Estimated Lifetime Probability of Acquiring Human Papillomavirus in the United States, estimated the lifetime probability of adults in the U.S. acquiring HPV by age 45 at 80%. The majority of people who become infected with HPV may never know it; many won't have symptoms and will get over the infection without problems, although they can still pass the infection on to others. In some people, however, the HPV infection may be persistent, causing precancerous changes in the cells of the cervix. These changes may be very slow- growing – from five to 20+ years – but if not detected and treated, they can eventually progress to cervical cancer. If the precancerous cells are detected early enough with a screening Pap smear, surgical removal can prevent progression to cervical cancer. And even if cancer has developed, if caught before the cancer has spread, the five-year survival rate is over 90 percent. Screenings for HPV infection and precancerous changes are not the only weapons available to fight the development of cervical cancer, though. There is also a vaccine available since 2006 to prevent HPV infection for both males and females. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends HPV vaccine delivery at ages 11–12 years to optimize protection before a child ever has contact with the virus. However, teens and young adults through age 26 who didn't start or finish the HPV vaccine series can also be inoculated. Knocking out cervical cancer begins with preventing the infection that causes it. READ MORE

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