Friday, December 17, 2010

January is National Cervical Health Awareness Month

January is National Cervical Health Awareness Month. Nearly 4,000 women in America will die this year from cervical cancer. These cancers are largely preventable, and raising public awareness can save lives.

Cervical cancer is the only cancer known to be primarily caused by a common virus, the Human Papilloma Virus (HPV). In the United States, 11,000 new cases of cervical cancer will be diagnosed in 2010 from HPV caused tumors. HPVs are sexually transmitted via skin-to-skin contact. Recent research indicates the virus also cause some cases of cancers of the mouth and head and neck in men and women.

Cervical cancer is often stigmatized as a disease acquired as a result of promiscuous behavior. While risks of acquiring a high-risk HPV increase with the number of one's sexual partners, persons in longtime monogamous relationships can be infected from a lone sexual encounter that occurred years, even decades, earlier.

Although, most women and men acquire an HPV infection during their lifetimes, fortunately, most HPV infections are benign and disappear spontaneously. Some however, persist. Of more than 100 known HPVs, only about 15 are high-risk viruses. Cervical cancers caused by high-risk HPVs usually develop slowly and may grow, often asymptomatically, for years prior to medical detection.

Pap test screening is the first line of defense against cervical cancer. Pap tests are recommended for women every other year after the age of 21. Regular gynecological Pap tests detect most cell changes due to HPV long before they become cancer. Early detection of these precancers can be effectively treated before they become malignant. Unfortunately, four out of five women do not receive their regular Pap test. In 2010 more than half of the women diagnosed with cervical cancer either never had a Pap or were not screened in the last five years.

In recognition of Cervical Health Awareness Month this January, Liberty Drug will be hosting a free educational seminar on HPV and Cervical Cancer featuring Dr. Russell Hoffman, MD, Chief of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Overlook Hospital, Summit, NJ on Wednesday, January 19th from 6PM to 7PM.

For more information about Cervical Health Awareness Month, visit the National Cervical Cancer Coalition.