Vaccine Treatment Takes Aim At Oral Cancer
10/29/2007 web-based article Hilary Waldman cancer.uchc.edu Promising New Drug Was Originally Designed To Fight Cervical Cancer A new cervical cancer vaccine headed for FDA approval this month could also put a dent in new cases of oral cancer - one of the deadliest cancers in the United States. At least one-quarter of oral cancer cases may be linked to human papillomavirus, the same sexually transmitted bug that causes cervical cancer. "Because of this vaccine, in 10 to 15 years, we're going to find many fewer head and neck cancers, it will have a positive collateral benefit not related to its primary cervical cancer use." said Brian Hill, founder and executive director of the Oral Cancer Foundation. Researchers started looking for new possible causes of oral cancer when tobacco use dropped precipitously in the United States but the incidence of oral cancer did not. About 34,000 people will be diagnosed with oral cancer in the United States this year, and only half of them will be alive in five years. The death rate for oral cancer is higher than that for cancer of the cervix, testicles, skin (melanoma), Hodgkins disease, a type of blood cancer and other we commonly hear about. Six years ago, researchers at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine looked at 253 patients with head and neck tumors and found HPV-16 - the tumor-causing strain of the virus - in 25 percent of those patients. HPV-positive tumors are most likely to occur in the throat, base of the tongue, [...]