By CLAIRE BATES
PUBLISHED: 18:00 GMT, 11 June 2012 | UPDATED: 18:10 GMT, 11 June 2012 Most
cases of cervical cancer are known to be caused by a sexually transmitted
virus. However, scientists have now found the virus only infects a surprising
small population of cells. The discovery opens the possibility of women having
them removed before the disease can develop, say scientists. Jade Goody died from cervical cancer in 2009
after delaying having a smear test Two strains of HPV, the human
papillomavirus, cause 70 per cent of cervical cancer cases, but brief
infections are very common in young women. They usually go away on their own
within a year or so and only pose a cancer risk when they last long-term. Researchers
at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston
have now identified the group of cells that are targeted by this cancer-causing
virus. It had been presumed for decades cervical cancers that develop from HPV
infection arise in a specific location in the cervix. The new finding shows
only cells in a part of the cervix called the ‘squamo-columnar junction’ can
become cancerous when infected with HPV while others in the inch-long organ
apparently do not.
More... The end of the Jade Goody effect: Cervical
cancer screening rates hit 10-year-low Dr Christopher Crum said: 'We have
discovered a discrete population of cells located in a specific area of the
cervix that could be responsible for most, if not all, of HPV-associated
cervical cancers.' A prior discovery published last year by some of Dr Crum’s
researchers on the origins of cancer in the oesophagus set the stage for the
latest study. The human papilloma virus
causes 70 per cent of cervical cancer cases Dr Crum and colleagues showed these
cells have a unique gene expression that is also found in the cells of
aggressive tumours of the cervix. This knowledge could potentially allow
doctors to differentiate benign from potentially dangerous pre-cancerous
lesions in the cervix and guide therapy. The researchers also found when the
cells are removed from the cervix which typically happens when treating
pre-cancers they do not regenerate - opening up exciting prospects for cancer
prevention. They said: 'The removal of these cells in young women before they
are subject to HPV infection or pre-cancerous changes could potentially reduce
the risk of cervical cancer, but further research is needed to evaluate the
benefits and risks of this potential therapy.' Additionally Dr Crum noted the
discovery of these cells could promote more meaningful cell models to further
study cervical cancer. The ‘Jade Goody effect’ - caused by the former Big
Brother contestant’s death from the disease in 2009 - led to a dramatic rise in
screenings in the UK .
But the tests are now being taken by less than 80 per cent of women despite
them saving 5,000 lives a year - a ten-year low. The study is published online
in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
No comments:
Post a Comment