Free vaccine program in schools leads to big drop in rates, although they remain high in the developing world • Ian Frazer: Eliminating cervical cancer globally is within reach

Australia could become first country to eradicate cervical cancer

Australia could become the first country to eradicate cervical cancer, according to an announcement from the International Papillomavirus Society.

New research, published on Sunday, reveals that Australia’s free HPV vaccine program in schools has led to a dramatic decline in future cervical cancer rates.

Within 40 years, the number of new cases is projected to drop to “just a few”, professor Suzanne Garland from the Royal Women’s Hospital, who led the research, said.

HPV (human papillomavirus) is a sexually transmitted infection that causes 99.9% of cervical cancers. In 2007, the federal government began providing the vaccine for free to girls aged 12-13 years, and in 2013, it extended the program to boys.

Australia's new cervical cancer test 'much more sensitive' – Cancer Council Read more

Girls and boys outside those ages but under 19 can also access two doses of the vaccine for free. In 2016, 78.6% of 15-year old girls and 72.9% of 15-year old boys had been vaccinated.

As a result, the HPV rate among women aged 18 to 24 dropped from 22.7% to 1.1% between 2005 and 2015.

Immunisation rates have risen further since 2015, and Garland said high coverage was creating a herd protection effect. “You’re getting herd protection in males, just from the female program,” she said. “That’s pretty amazing.”

The Univeristy of Queensland’s Professor Ian Frazer, the co-inventor of the vaccine, said older women who had never been immunised should also remember to be screened regularly.



In December, the government introduced a more advanced screening test that could eradicate cervical cancer even sooner, he said.

IUDs may cut risk of cervical cancer by a third, study indicates Read more

“As long as we continue the screening program, we will continue to pick up those with the virus already, and as long as we keep up the vaccination, we could have no new cases in 10-20 years.



“Only 50-60% of women participate regularly in the screening program,” he said. “If that was 100% we would have no cervical cancer in this country even without the vaccine.”

Australia introduced a national cervical screening program in 1991, which involved a pap test every two years. This was replaced in December with a more advanced test that can detect high-risk HPV infections before cancer develops.



Under the new program, women aged 25 to 74 are asked to take the test every five years.



Frazer also said a new vaccine would be used this year to target more virus strains of HPV that caused cancer.

Despite Australia’s success, Garland’s report found that cervical cancer rates were still high in the developing world.

Frazer said the challenge was a lack of existing vaccination programs for young girls aged 12-14, the optimal time for the vaccine’s effectiveness.

“It will be a challenge to get rid of cervical cancer globally,” he said. “But the tools are there to do it. We’ve done the program in Vanuatu and Bhutan, and that shows it doesn’t matter what country, if you provide the vaccine for free, people will take it up.”

Eliminating cervical cancer globally is within reach if governments act Read more

Joe Tooma, the chief executive of the Australian Cervical Cancer Foundation, said the government could help other countries access the HPV vaccine, which had been invented in Australia.

“Two-thirds of the world’s population of women don’t get access to what Australian women do,” he said. “Unless we do something, it will still be one of the major cancer killers in developing countries.

“As the country that invented the vaccine, we have an obligation to share it with the rest of the world”.