Monday, January 4, 2010

New Vaccine for HPV in the works – Protects against some strains - STILL NO GUARANTEE!

There is a new vaccine that experts are currently working on for the HPV virus that has shown some promise in mice. However, they are not clapping their hands yet. And at best, the experts have purported that this HPV vaccination would only protect against few of the 40 known HPV strains that cause genital warts in males and females. So while some promise is being shown, there are some other concerns as well. Such as, how long will it take the medical community to recognize that HPV is out of control? And what about the other strains of the virus that cause genital warts?

In so many words: so what, you found a way to combat some of the strains, what about ALL STRAINS. We think it is high time that modern day medicine, which can treat CANCER, figures out a way to treat HPV or Genital human papillomavirus; a terrible virus that infects, according to the CDC (Center for Disease Control), 6 million new people a year in the US alone!

The article that was published online on Tuesday, April 15, 2009 in HealthDay News cites the report as follows,

“Researchers say they've created a synthetic vaccine that can be delivered as a nasal spray for human papillomavirus -- the source of the most common sexually transmitted disease in the United States and a cause of cervical cancer.

The experimental vaccine, tested so far just with mice, also offers protection against different strains of HPV, the researchers said.

The existing vaccine for HPV, called Gardasil, protects against four strains of the virus that are responsible for about 70 percent of all cervical cancers. The Gardasil vaccine requires three injections for full protection.

"We have been trying to produce a single vaccine that would be able to protect patients against all cancer causing HPV types," said Richard B.S. Roden, lead researcher for the new study and an associate professor of pathology, gynecology and obstetrics, and oncology at Johns Hopkins University.

"What we have done is to try to develop a completely synthetic vaccine that would induce antibodies that would neutralize and protect against a whole range of these cancer-causing strains," he added.

The advantages of the synthetic vaccine are that it can be synthesized as if it were a drug, Roden said, adding that "it can be made chemically in the lab rather than having to use biological systems."

A synthetic vaccine also should be cheaper, Roden added. Using this approach, the vaccine could also be given nasally, he said.

"This may be another way to reduce the cost of vaccination, because you don't have to use needles," he said.

HPV is responsible for genital warts and about 99.7 percent of all cervical cancers worldwide.”
READ FULL ARTICLE HERE

(Source: Internet, 2010; http://health.usnews.com/usnews/health/healthday/080415/new-hpv-vaccine-promising-in-mice.htm.)

So while there seems to something in the works that may help people fight off or defend themselves against genital warts in TEN YEARS FROM NOW, what about RIGHT NOW? What about the 20 million people in the US who have HPV; according to recent CDC estimates?

Well there is some hope!

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