HPV vaccine cuts cervical cancer risk with minimal side effects

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In a moment health officials are calling a turning point, two sweeping Cochrane reviews report that the HPV vaccine is a powerful shield against cervical cancer—paired with a reassuring safety profile. The analyses bring together data from clinical trials and real-world studies, spanning more than 132 million people, and find strong, consistent protection when vaccination occurs before exposure to the virus.

Across the board, the most compelling figure is that girls aged 16 or younger who received the vaccine were about 80 percent less likely to develop cervical cancer than their unvaccinated peers. The jab also helps prevent precancerous cervical changes and other tissue abnormalities, reinforcing why many health agencies now recommend catch-up programs and early immunization. The vaccines studied include Cervarix and Gardasil, and the reviews emphasize that common side effects are minor—such as a sore arm—while reports of serious safety concerns do not occur more frequently in vaccinated groups.

These findings support global guidance to vaccinate both girls and boys to maximize protection and reduce HPV-related cancers in the long term. The researchers note that the protection is strongest when vaccination happens before the virus is encountered, and they stress the benefits of early, broad uptake to build herd immunity. They also point out that vaccine hesitancy persists in some regions, fueled in part by misinformation circulating on social media, even as independent studies continue to corroborate safety signals.

The Cochrane team highlights that cervical cancer remains a major global health burden, with about 660,000 new cases and around 350,000 deaths in 2022, according to the World Health Organization. The reviews consolidate evidence showing that vaccination not only lowers cervical cancer risk but also reduces the occurrence of HPV-related precancers and other HPV-associated cancers later in life. Importantly, while most data come from wealthier countries, the researchers call for expanded research in lower-income regions where cervical cancer remains disproportionately deadly and vaccination coverage lags.

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