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Heart to Heart Blog - U.S. News & World Report

HPV Vaccine for Men: It's About Time

November 14, 2008 05:41 PM ET | Bernadine Healy M.D. | Permanent Link | Print

Finally, two years after it was approved for use in young women, a vaccine against the sexually transmitted human papillomavirus (HPV) has now been shown to be safe and effective in protecting young men as well. Merck's vaccine Gardasil cut infections caused by the four most dangerous strains of this virus by 45 percent and reduced the occurrence of HPV-induced warts by 90 percent, according to a new study involving more than 4,000 male volunteers age 16 to 26. The next step is for the Food and Drug Administration to give its blessing.

The delay in studying the vaccine in men has puzzled me. Men are, after all, carriers of this virus known to infect the female cervix, leading to a virtual epidemic of abnormal Pap smears in sexually active young women. Although in most women the virus is cleared by their immune system, when it's not it continues to percolate for years and each year accounts for the almost 11,000 cancers of the cervix—a cancer that robs women of their fertility if not their life. Ignoring the role of men in promulgating this illness is at odds with how we approach most other forms of STDs, where doctors treat both partners. Leaving men out also subverts the core tenet of vaccination: creating so-called herd immunity.

But men infected with HPV put more than women's health in jeopardy. They can develop genital warts from certain strains of the infection, as well as genital cancer. HPV-derived cancers of the penis and anus are considerably less common than is invasive cervical cancer in women, but to the thousands of men who are so afflicted, the cancer is every bit as disabling and life-threatening.

What's less appreciated by most people and even many doctors is that HPV is also linked to head and neck cancers, once thought to be almost exclusively the result of a lifetime of drinking and smoking. Not so anymore. We are now seeing a rise in HPV-related cancers of the tonsils and back of the tongue in a generally younger group of people, and here men seem more vulnerable to this devastating cancer than women do.

The explanation is that HPV is transmitted during oral sex—a practice that's become epidemic among our kids, one in which "safe sex" involving condoms is almost unheard of. There's an important lesson here for young men. Just because they can't get pregnant does not mean they can't get infected—and with dire consequences. And, though it's better late than never that young men will have access to the HPV vaccine, it should be accompanied with a heavy dose of sex health education as well. HPV is not the only STD that goes for the throat.

Tags: human papillomavirus | vaccines | men's health | sexually transmitted diseases

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Oral cancers

Oral cancers in men and women, particularly in those who are non smokers, are the fastest growing segment of the oral cancer population. There was an 11% increase in oral cancer last year alone, the first time in 5 decades we have seen an increase. The HPV16 virus is largely responsible for this increase. As an organization that has co-sponsored much of the research on this over the last 8 years, The Oral Cancer Foundation has an extensive web page of what we know and what we still do not have answers for at this location http://www.oralcancerfoundation.org/hpv/index.htm

Oral cancer is not just for smokers anymore. Anyone who is old enough to have had sex is now a candidate for oral cancer. Brian Hill, www.oralcancer.org

hello

dear my self hemant iam 25 years old i have h p v and i was geeting treatment from the doctor from last 1and half year which is best treatment for hpv . now iam geeting homoeopathic treatment . so tell me the rite treatment for this hpv

Homeopathy

Homeopathy is water.

Seriously.

It is absolutely useless. It takes an ingredient that causes similar symptoms, dilutes it in water to such a degree that the original ingredient is no longer even present, then you take the water (sometimes another liquid is used, but it's the same idea).

First of all, the mechanics of taking something that causes similar symptoms to cure something unrelated is bogus.

Second of all, even if it were true, you're not taking enough of it to work. Stop taking homeopathic treatments and go to a clinical doctor. Planned Parenthood is a good place to start if you have no other trusted physician available.

~Joreth

http://joreth.livejournal.com/tag/sti

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About Heart to Heart

Bernadine Healy, M.D., U.S.News & World Report's health editor and author of the magazine’s On Health column, is the former head of the National Institutes of Health, the American Red Cross, and the College of Medicine and Public Health at Ohio State University. A cardiologist and author of two books, she spent more than 25 years practicing medicine. In this blog, she covers matters close to her heart, including cardiovascular disease and other important aspects of personal health and health policy.

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