Many unaware of links between HPV, cancer, poll finds
Most people don't know much about HPV and its long-term cancer risks, and also have key misperceptions about how the virus is spread, the poll found.
For example, the majority of people are unaware that the virus is more common among men than women, and is associated with rising rates of cancers that directly impact men.
Instead, people still see HPV as mostly associated with cervical cancer risk in women, and shrug off the importance of vaccination for men, results show.
This lack of awareness might explain why HPV vaccination rates have been slow to increase, researchers said.
"We have a vaccine that has been shown to reduce the risk of HPV infection by up to 90%," Electra Paskett, a cancer control researcher with the Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center, said in a news release.
"This is a powerful tool for cancer prevention that has only been available to us in the past few decades, and we are seeing the impact of those vaccines now through the scientific data," she added.
The federal Healthy People 2030 goals call for at least 80% of teens to be vaccinated against HPV by the end of the decade, according to the National Cancer Institute.
But only about 57% of boys and 61% of girls have gotten the HPV vaccine, the NCI says.
For the survey, Ohio State researchers asked people if they agree or disagree with basic statements about HPV. Responses showed an astonishing lack of knowledge.
For example, about 42% of people believe HPV is more common in women than in men, the poll found.
"This is concerning because more men are infected with HPV than women and they could unknowingly spread it to their partners," Paskett said.
Likewise, nearly half of respondents (45%) didn't know that HPV is linked to cancers other than cervical cancer in women.
In fact, HPV does cause more than 9 out of every 10 cases of cervical cancer, but the virus also causes cancers of the penis, anus, head and neck among men, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
About 4 out of every 10 cases of cancer caused by HPV occur among men, the CDC says. Every year, more than 15,000 American men develop cancers caused by HPV.
There also have been rapidly rising rates of HPV-related tonsil and tongue base cancers, noted Dr. Matthew Old, a head and neck surgeon with the Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center.
These cancers could become one of the top three cancers among middle-aged U.S. men 45 to 65 by 2045, and the most common cancer in elderly men in the next 10 years, recent estimates suggest.
In the new survey, 40% of poll respondents believed that people with HPV have symptoms. In truth, HPV infections are largely silent for years, with symptoms developing only after the virus has caused cancer.
"It can take years or even decades for the genetic changes caused by HPV to take effect and transform into cancer," Old said in a news release.
CDC stats show that the vaccine has been effective in cutting down on HPV since its approval for girls in 2006 and subsequent approval for boys in 2009.
Infections with the HPV strains that cause most cancers have dropped 88% among teen girls and 81% among young adult women, the CDC says.
HPV is sexually transmitted, and once someone is infected there are no drugs that will rid them of the virus, experts said.
The HPV vaccine, Gardasil 9, is recommended between ages 9 and 12 for maximum effectiveness, prior to potential exposure, Paskett said. However, she added that the vaccine also is now available to adults up to age 45.
"Many who are unvaccinated unknowingly carry and spread high-risk strains of the virus," Old said. "That's why vaccination is so important."
More information
SOURCE: Ohio State University, news release, March 4, 2025
Copyright © 2025 HealthDay. All rights reserved.
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Boston Globe
2 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Allergies seem nearly impossible to avoid — unless you're Amish
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Hay fever, or an allergic reaction to tree, grass and weed pollens, emerged as the first recognized allergic disease in the early 1800s, climbing to epidemic levels in Europe and North America by 1900. The 1960s saw a sharp increase in the prevalence of pediatric asthma, a condition in which the airways tighten when breathing in an allergen. From the 1990s onward, there has been an upswing in the developed world in food allergies, including cow's milk, peanut and egg allergies. Urbanization, air pollution, dietary changes and an indoor lifestyle are often cited as possible factors. Preparing a horse team for work on a farm in Pulaski, Pennsylvania. Keith Srakocic/Associated Press The 'hygiene hypothesis' - first proposed in a 1989 study by American immunologist David Strachan - suggests that early childhood exposure to microbes protects against allergic diseases by contributing to the development of a healthy immune system. 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Advertisement In 2021, Järvinen-Seppo and her colleagues compared the gut microbiomes of 65 Old Order Mennonite infants from a rural community in New York with 39 urban/suburban infants from nearby Rochester. Like the Amish, the Old Order Mennonites follow a traditional agrarian lifestyle. Almost three-fourths of Mennonite infants in the study were colonized with B. infantis, a bacterium associated with lower rates of allergic diseases, in contrast to 21 percent of Rochester infants. 'The colonization rate is very low in the United States and other Western countries, compared to very high rates in Mennonite communities, similar to some developing countries,' Järvinen-Seppo said. 'This mirrors the rates of autoimmune and allergic diseases.' These clues about the origin of the farm effect represent a step toward the prevention of allergic diseases, Järvinen-Seppo says. 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Vox
2 hours ago
- Vox
Can't sleep? It's not totally your fault.
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UPI
4 hours ago
- UPI
Think before you sip: summer drinking dangers
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