A homegrown solution for cervical cancer
A homegrown solution for cervical cancerThe cost and subsequent shortage of HPV vaccines has put preventing cervical cancer out of reach of many countries like India. But that may be about to change.Good morning! We are beginning on a somewhat sombre note. Cervical cancer is the second most common cancer among Indian women, and the country accounts for 21% of global cervical cancer deaths. Why, then, does the vaccine for human papillomavirus (HPV) not find as many takers in India? Vaccine hesitancy is one possibility. Merck’s and GlaxoSmithKline's HPV shots courted controversy in the 2000s for their adverse effects. Though investigations over time revealed that reported deaths were unrelated to vaccine administration, their steep costs remain a hurdle. India now has a cheaper, indigenously-developed vaccine in Cervavac, made by the Serum Institute of India. We’re better placed than before to prevent cervical cancer deaths. Will India make the most of this opportunity? Bonus: our picks of the week’s best longreads. If you enjoy reading us, why not give us a follow at @thesignaldotco on Twitter, Instagram, and Threads. VS Chauhan It's an almost entirely preventable disease but cervical cancer kills one woman in India every seven minutes. That represents 21% of global cervical cancer deaths, and makes it the second most common cancer in Indian women, with 125,000 women being diagnosed and over 75,000 dying from the disease in India each year. Vaccinating people against the human papillomavirus or HPV, which causes the vast majority of cervical cancer cases, is a highly effective way of preventing the disease. HPV vaccines were first introduced in 2006 in the United States, and Australia became the first country to roll out a national vaccination programme the following year. But until recently, the cost of the vaccines—as much as Rs 4,000 for a single dose with usually at least two doses required—has put preventing cervical cancer this way out of reach of most low- and middle-income countries across the world, including India. Launched in September 2022, India's first indigenously-developed quadrivalent HPV vaccine, Cervavac, has the potential to improve access to vaccines and revolutionise cervical cancer prevention in these countries. Developed by the Serum Institute of India, one of the largest vaccine producers in the world, it's currently priced at half of the cost of its competitors Merck & Co's Gardasil and GlaxoSmithKline's Cervarix at 2,000 rupees per dose with plans announced to produce 200 million doses. But as production is scaled up, the Institute hopes to be able to make a dose of Cervavac available to the public at a price of between Rs 200-400 in the near future. The vaccine alliance Gavi signed a new three-year partnership with the Indian government in February 2023, with the aim to extend life-saving vaccines to millions of children nationwide, including helping the country introduce the HPV vaccine into India's national immunisation regimen. And in February 2024, the government announced the vaccine would be part of the Universal Immunization Program, following endorsement from the National Technical Advisory Group on Immunization. During her recent interim budget speech for 2024-25, Indian Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman emphasised the government's commitment to actively "encourage" vaccination as a proactive measure against cervical cancer—a significant announcement for women's health in India. It hasn't only been affordability that has hindered the widespread adoption of HPV vaccines in India. When Merck & Co's and GlaxoSmithKline's HPV vaccines were introduced in India in 2008, there was controversy around the safety and efficacy of Gardasil and Cervarix. This controversy around the vaccines was compounded by cultural and societal factors, including the fear that they would lead to sexual promiscuity, contributing to vaccine hesitancy. In the northeastern Indian state of Sikkim's initial vaccination drive in 2018, 119 minor and one serious adverse events following immunisation were reported. In the subsequent campaign in 2019, there were 83 minor and three serious cases. This sparked heated debates about the vaccines and raised public apprehension. Out of the many women who were immunised, four deaths were recorded. However, subsequent investigations concluded that these deaths were unrelated to the vaccine, emphasising the importance of thorough investigation and scientific scrutiny. Recent studies of India's Cervavac vaccine show initial antibody responses to the vaccine are on par with initial responses to Gardasil. Follow-up studies will be required to evaluate how long-lasting and hence how durable this protection is. It also remains to be assessed whether a single dose of Cervavac would provide a sufficient and durable immune response. This follows the World Health Organization's recommendation of a single-dose schedule for other HPV vaccines, which would further reduce the cost of HPV vaccination. As the global focus shifts towards eliminating cervical cancer as a public health problem, increasing vaccination coverage, particularly in low- and middle-income countries, is a crucial step towards ensuring the World Health Organization's target of 90 percent of 15-year-old girls vaccinated with the HPV vaccine is achieved by 2030. Currently, Australia is on track to be the first country in the world to eliminate cervical cancer, with modelling suggesting this could occur by 2035. But there are promising signs other countries in the Indo-Pacific could soon follow suit if health inequities can be overcome. Strong vaccination programmes work best alongside strong cervical screening programmes. Now that the vaccine is available, the need of the hour is to significantly enhance awareness, screening, and vaccination programmes. The introduction of HPV vaccines nearly 20 years ago marked a significant milestone in the global fight against cervical cancer, offering a safe and effective means of prevention. Moving forward, it is crucial to address barriers to vaccine access and ensure vaccine safety to pave the way for a future free of this disease. By addressing barriers to vaccination access and expanding other preventive measures like screening, countries like India can continue to make strides in reducing the burden of cervical cancer and save potentially thousands of women's lives. Continued collaboration, innovation, and advocacy will be paramount to make cervical cancer a preventable and treatable disease for all. VS Chauhan is President of the Malaria Vaccines Development Program. He is also the Chancellor of GITAM University, Co-Founder of Biotide Solutions LLP and a Distinguished Visiting Professor at the Institution of Eminence University of Delhi. Originally published under Creative Commons by 360info™. ICYMIKeeper putters: At its highest level, sport sometimes produces unmatched drama that not only immortalises the dramatis personae but also the props they use. This happened in 1997, when Tiger Woods won the Masters golf tournament by 12 strokes. As he produced one birdie after another, the instrument with which he was conjuring magic, a Scotty Cameron putter called Newport 2 TeI3, was also being broadcast in close-up. While Cameron’s handcrafted putters were already sought after, Woods' touch elevated them to objets d’art. The more famous one that the golfer uses, Newport 2 GSS, with a distinctive red dot, sells at auctions in excess of $200,000. Today, Cameron putters have an exclusive but devoted fan following with their own forums and events, says this Bloomberg story on the famous “blades” and “mallets”. Pandemic (un)preparedness: The WHO hopes it would have a definitive text on the world's first pandemic treaty before its annual assembly meets in May. Hope is, however, a dangerous thing. The Financial Times reports that despite nine rounds of international negotiations, the latest of which was held last month, attended by officials from 198 countries, countries are nowhere close to agreeing on an accord. The Global South insists on strict rules for sharing information about new pathogens. Pharma companies are hesitant, as sharing genetic information would hamper their ability to develop exclusive, patented vaccines. There's another imminent threat. If Donald Trump were to return to the White House, the US may pull out of discussions entirely. Under Trump, the US (in)famously withdrew from the WHO. At this moment, it seems probable that the pandemic treaty, which was to be a guiding light to governments so they don't make the same fatal mistakes they did during Covid-19, will never see the light of day. Diaries of a rockstar (manager): The lives of music icons have always been scrutinised closely even as fans elevate their more problematic traits to the pedestal of genius. But behind the stories of Elvis Presley’s serial womanising to Led Zeppelin’s proclivity for destroying hotel rooms are the tales of their managers who led them to success. This long story in The New Yorker traces the evolution of music managers and the many roles they have taken on in the last 60 years. Music managers have gone from being powerful figures that brought home the dole (such as Presley’s Colonel Parker) to abusive characters preying on the wealth and fame of too-young stars (such as Britney Spears’ management) and now, to becoming the artist’s villain. Taylor Swift’s legal battle with star manager Scooter Braun over the rights to her earliest albums perhaps is the nadir of musician-manager relations. As top artists choose to walk away from record labels too, could this be the end of the music manager altogether? Unwanted by one, unwanted by all: In December 2023, the US-Mexico border witnessed a record 300,000-plus “migrant encounters”. But Mexico isn’t the only major source of asylum seekers to the US. Desperate migrants from all over the world are pouring into the country in the runup to a crucial election that’s seeing even President Joe Biden adopt more hawkish stances. And Eagle Pass, Texas, is at the eye of the storm. Texas’ Republican governor Greg Abbott is now sending buses packed with migrants—who tear through barbed wire fences and duck-and-avoid border patrol guards—to “sanctuary cities” such as Los Angeles, Denver, Chicago, New York, and Philadelphia. They’re not up for the task though. Denver is now shipping asylum seekers elsewhere, and what’s unfolding as a result is a humanitarian crisis even as Biden’s challenger Donald Trump doubles down on conservative rhetoric. The Signal is free today. But if you enjoyed this post, you can tell The Signal that their writing is valuable by pledging a future subscription. You won't be charged unless they enable payments. |
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