Investigator
Professor · Cardiff University, Healthcare Sciences
Prevention and Diagnosis of Cervical Cancers in the UK and Europe: What Have We Learned in the Last 10 Years and What Is Next?
This review presents an outline of the state of the knowledge on the prevention and diagnosis of cervical cancers over the last decade. Screening and prevention methods are considered, such as cervical self-sampling, Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination and the use of digital technologies and artificial intelligence (AI) in diagnostics and screening, as are some success stories. However, despite the successes stemming from the UK and Europe–such as that no new cases of cervical cancer have been detected in a cohort of Scottish women vaccinated against HPV between 12–13 years old–cervical screening rates are falling and social, cultural and economic barriers to HPV vaccination uptake remain. There are several clear pathways that could reduce not only incidence rates of cervical cancer, but also non-cervical HPV related cancers such as oropharyngeal and anal cancers.
The European response to the WHO call to eliminate cervical cancer as a public health problem
AbstractThe age‐standardised incidence of cervical cancer in Europe varies widely by country (between 3 and 25/100000 women‐years) in 2018. Human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine coverage is low in countries with the highest incidence and screening performance is heterogeneous among European countries. A broad group of delegates of scientific professional societies and cancer organisations endorse the principles of the WHO call to eliminate cervical cancer as a public health problem, also in Europe. All European nations should, by 2030, reach at least 90% HPV vaccine coverage among girls by the age of 15 years and also boys, if cost‐effective; they should introduce organised population‐based HPV‐based screening and achieve 70% of screening coverage in the target age group, providing also HPV testing on self‐samples for nonscreened or underscreened women; and to manage 90% of screen‐positive women. To guide member states, a group of scientific professional societies and cancer organisations engage to assist in the rollout of a series of concerted evidence‐based actions. European health authorities are requested to mandate a group of experts to develop the third edition of European Guidelines for Quality Assurance of Cervical Cancer prevention based on integrated HPV vaccination and screening and to monitor the progress towards the elimination goal. The occurrence of the COVID‐19 pandemic, having interrupted prevention activities temporarily, should not deviate stakeholders from this ambition. In the immediate postepidemic phase, health professionals should focus on high‐risk women and adhere to cost‐effective policies including self‐sampling.
Eliminating HPV-caused cancers in Europe: Achieving the possible
The 690,000 cases of cancer caused worldwide each year by HPV (human papillomavirus) are among the easiest of all cancers to prevent. However, the actions so far taken in terms of both policy and practice by health systems in many European states have neither matched the scale of the problem nor seized the opportunities for disease prevention potentially offered by vaccination and screening. Treatments for HPV-caused cancers are also inequitably provided across the region and widespread misinformation about HPV undermines efforts to improve public health. The European Cancer Organisation's HPV Action Network has made the case for action for the elimination of all the cancers caused by HPV through gender-neutral vaccination, effective cervical cancer screening, better quality treatments, and public and professional education across Europe. The World Health Organisation's new global strategy for the elimination of cervical cancer (launched in November 2020), together with Europe's Beating Cancer Plan (February 2021), together provide a major opportunity to tackle decisively all the cancers caused by HPV. The Beating Cancer Plan, which was significantly influenced by evidence provided by the HPV Action Network, commits to supporting EU member states' efforts to extend routine vaccination of girls and boys and to creating a new EU-supported Cancer Screening Scheme to help Member States ensure that 90% of the EU population who qualify for cervical cancer screening are offered it by 2025. The goal of HPV cancer elimination is now both possible and achievable. The challenge is to ensure implementation and delivery by EU member states and more widely across the European region.
Professor
Cardiff University · Healthcare Sciences