Pandemic-related disruptions in cancer screening showed an uneven recovery in 2023, data from the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) indicated. Comparing past-year reported screening rates from 2019 to 2023,
From 2008 to 2022, the incidence of cervical precancers fell by 80% among screened women aged 20 to 24 years, supporting recommendations for HPV vaccination at ages 11 to 12 years, researchers wrote in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.
Despite a proven survival benefit, the addition of pembrolizumab (Keytruda) to chemoradiotherapy for newly diagnosed locally advanced cervical cancer was not cost-effective in an economic evaluation study.
Bandi and her team found that past-year cervical cancer screenings in 2023 remained at 14%, which is below pre-pandemic levels. “We want to detect cancers early when they’re more treatable,” Bandi said.
Preventive screenings for cancer declined during the pandemic, with lockdowns, social distancing and COVID-19 surges
After a long decline, cervical cancer rates are rising in rural counties, increasing a gap with urban counties, a new study finds.
A recent CDC report further demonstrates the effectiveness of the HPV vaccine against cervical cancer. HPV is a sexually transmitted infection that affects both females and males and is linked to higher risks of various forms of cancer.
Cervical cancer incidence is rising, with rural and minoritized populations experiencing worse outcomes due to suboptimal care and screening disparities. Data from 2001-2019 reveal a widening gap in cervical cancer rates between rural and urban women,
Researchers examined screening rates for three kinds of cancer before, during, and after the COVID-19 pandemic.
Kennedy Jr., is preventing cervical cancer in young women. The report comes after Kennedy pledged to give a family member any fees he might earn from HPV vaccine litigation. In a 2019 video ...
“For those of you that are new, Erin’s working through some — an issue on her upper lip,” Thompson, 42, said during the Monday, March 3 episode of their “Calm Down” podcast. “But it’s not what you think it is.”
Most of the women under 30 with cervical cancer in the Netherlands have not been vaccinated against HPV. A study conducted by gynecologists from Amsterdam UMC in collaboration with the Comprehensive Cancer Centre of the Netherlands (IKNL) found that only 15 percent of young women with cervical cancer had been vaccinated against the virus that most commonly causes this cancer,