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Wednesday, 9 July 2014

BLOOD CLOTS''

No link between HPV vaccine and blood clots: study


A vaccine that protects against four strains of the human papillomavirus (HPV), which can lead to cervical cancer, does not increase the risk of blood clots in women, new research has found.
The findings in the Journal of the American Medical Association are based on a study of 500,000 girls and women aged 10 to 44 who received the HPV vaccine between 2006 and 2013.
Using data from national registries, researchers in Denmark found no evidence of an increased risk of venous thromboembolism (blood clotting) in the 42 days after the shot, which they defined as the main risk period.
Of the 500,000 females in the study 4,375 reported cases of blood clots. Of those, 889 had been vaccinated during the study period.

HPV at a glace

  • Human Papilloma Virus is a sexually transmitted infection
  • Up to 80 per cent of adults will be infected at some point
  • More than 120 HPV viruses are known to infect skin and mucous membranes
  • Many carriers do not know they are infected and fight off the infection without symptoms
  • Some HPV types cause warts – such as flat warts, genital warts and plantar warts
  • 20 HPV virus types cause cancers including cervical, head and neck cancer, penile, anal, skin, as well as cancer of the vulva and vagina
  • Not everyone infected with these HPV types develops cancer
  • Most of these cancer cases are caused by HPV16 or HPV18
  • In 2002, the World Health Organization estimated HPV caused 5.2 per cent of all cancers worldwide
  • There are two types of HPV vaccine available; both protect again HPV16 and 18
Source: ABC Health & Wellbeing
When researchers adjusted for use of oral contraceptives, which can increase the risk of blood clots, they found no association between blood clotting and the vaccine.
"Our results, which were consistent after adjustment for oral contraceptive use and in girls and young women as well as mid-adult women, do not provide support for an increased risk of VTE following quadrivalent HPV vaccination," the study said.
"Safety concerns can compromise immunization programs to the detriment of public health, and timely evaluations of such concerns are essential."
The report said two earlier studies had suggested a link between the Gardasil vaccine, made by Merck, and a higher risk of blood clots.
The Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said in 2009 that there was an increase in patient reports of blood clots after the vaccination.
However, on further review, the CDC said 90 per cent of those "had a known risk factor for blood clots, such as taking oral contraceptives."
The vaccine aims to prevent the spread of HPV, which is the most common sexually transmitted infection.
Certain HPV strains can cause cancers of the cervix, head, neck and anus.
US health authorities recommend the HPV vaccine for boys and girls before they become sexually active.

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