Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Global burden of cervical cancer and World Health Organization priorities Rolando Herrero Cervical cancer: risk factors • Multiparity • Early age at sexual debut/marriage • Early age at first pregnancy • Smoking • Oral contraceptives use • Cervical inflammation • HIV infection/immuno-suppressed status Cervical cancer: Cause • Persistent infection with one of 13 oncogenic HPV (16, 18, 31, 33, 35, 39, 45, 51, 52, 56, 58, 59, 68) types is the necessary cause • Not everyone infected with HPV will develop cervical cancer • 80% of HPV infections regress within two years • Cervical cancer is a very rare long-term outcome of a common infection • 1 out of every 10,000 women infected with high-risk HPV will develop cervical cancer in their life-time Natural history of cervical cancer HPV infection Co-factors Normal cell Persistent HPV infection Integration of viral DNA Transformation of cell Dyplasia Cancer Global burden of cervical cancer World 2012 (ASR) 2030 Incidence 528 000 (14.0) 710 000 Mortality 266 000 (6.8) 383 000 5 year Prevalence 1 547 000 - Less developed regions 2012 (ASR) 2030 Incidence 445 000 (15.7) 648 000 Mortality 230 000 (8.3) 363 000 5 year Prevalence 1 258 000 Asia 2012 (ASR) 2030 Incidence 284 823 (12.7) 391 042 Mortality 144 434 (6.4) 217 890 5 year Prevalence 806 000 - Ferlay et al., GLOBOCAN 2012 v1.0, Cancer Incidence and Mortality Worldwide: IARC CancerBase No. 11 [Internet]. Lyon, France: International Agency for Research on Cancer; 2013. Available from: http://globocan.iarc.fr, accessed on 05/05/2015. Cervical cancer in the World • Fourth-most common cancer in women • 528,000 new cases in 2012 • 266,000 deaths • Around 85% of the global burden occurs in the less developed regions Source: Ferlay et al., GLOBOCAN 2012 v1.0, Cancer Incidence and Mortality Worldwide: IARC CancerBase No. 11 [Internet]. Lyon, France: International Agency for Research on Cancer; 2013. Available from: http://globocan.iarc.fr, accessed on 17/02/2014. SOURCE: Forman et al., (2013) Cancer Incidence in Five Continents, Vol. X (electronic version) Lyon, IARC. http://ci5.iarc.fr last accessed on 18/02/2014. Trends in Incidence & Mortality from cervical Cancer - England Source: UK Cancer Information Service 2012 Trends in cervical cancer incidence in selected low- and middleincome populations (1960-2007) Cancer Incidence in Five Continents Volumes I to X (electronic version) Lyon, IARC. http://ci5.iarc.frc Cervical Cancer Incidence – Trends in Europe Cervical cancer mortality in selected Latin American Countries (1955-2012) 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 Mexico Chile Uruguay World Health Organization, mortality database http://www.who.int/healthinfo/statistics/mortality_rawdata/en/i ndex.html (accessed on 02/03/2015) Cervical cancer mortality by level of education 1990-2005 Age‐adjusted rates per 100,000 women Ferreccio Int J Cancer 2012 WHO priorities for cervical cancer control WHO priorities for cervical cancer control • Socio-economic development • Women’s empowerment • HPV vaccination of adolescent girls • Screening programs with new technologies • Early diagnosis and treatment • Palliative care Recent knowledge of natural history and biology of HPV infection and cervical cancer have resulted in new primary and secondary prevention methods Newly available primary and secondary prevention tools • HPV vaccination of adolescents • Modified schedules <3 doses • HPV testing of women over 30 years old • Self collection • CareHPV • Visual inspection with acetic acid • See and treat New Tools for Cervical cancer prevention: HPV Vaccines • • • • • Prophylactic vaccines could prevent 70-90% of cervical cancers, multivalent even more Programs already in place in most developed countries Poorest countries US$ 4.50 per dose (GAVI). GAVI aims to support HPV vaccination for 30 million girls by 2020. Many challenges remain: • Organizing HPV vaccination programmes for adolescent • Obtaining high coverage in the target group • Affordability and sustainability of programs Secondary prevention is still needed • • • Worldwide coverage of targeted adolescent girls by HPV vaccines will take many years Impact on ICC incidence is expected several decades after vaccination Even in the most optimistic scenario where vaccination coverage in the target age group would reach 100% within the 10 coming years in all countries of the world, it is estimated that nearly 28 million women will be affected by cervical cancer in the coming 40 years1. 1 Globocan, Ferlay et al., 2012 Some reasons for limited impact of cervical cancer screening • • • • • • • • Poor screening coverage Specimen collection and handling Inherent limitation of cytology Lack of SOPs and quality assurance at the labs Loss to follow-up Lack of information systems Geographic and economic barriers Lack of organization of program Characteristics of HPV testing Advantages Objective Robust Reproducible Accurate Effective Extension of intervals Self-collection OK for post vaccination Disadvantages Limited specificity High cost Follow up of positives Technical requirements Social stigma 20 Research gaps • Few randomized trials that evaluated screen-and-treat strategies and patient-important outcomes. • Very few studies that assessed the strategies that the guideline development group ranked as clinically relevant (e.g. HPV test followed by VIA). 21 Key research questions identified during WHO guidelines development • HPV testing followed by treatment • Strong recommendation, weak evidence • The Expert Committee concluded that this approach needs to be better understood: benefits and harms • HPV testing + triage • Which triage test? • Which algorithm? • Which algorithm for which context? IARC research projects on screening: • CESTA: • Providing evidence for the main recommended Screen & Treat algorithms from the updated WHO guidelines • targeting low-income countries (LIC) • ESTAMPA: • HPV triage in programmes with HPV primary testing • Targeting middle-income countries (MIC) Conclusions • Cervical cancer remains an important public health problem in developing countries • New opportunities for prevention are very promising • WHO can play an important role in implementation of programs to assure success