The True Culprits of Cervical Cancer Beyond HPV
However, we may be targeting the wrong bull’s-eye.
Setting aside the undeniable deaths or injuries after HPV vaccination or its toxic adjuvant—all of which we have analyzed based on scientific data and literature in the past three articles in the series—the HPV vaccines themselves are not fundamental to the prevention of cancer.
We must instead consider the root causes responsible for HPV infection and cervical cancer.
The vulnerable surface of the Cervix
Throughout humanity, the role of a woman has been closely intertwined with marriage and childbirth, impacting her lifelong health and well-being.
Under the effect of hormones during early puberty, the transformation zone forms and gradually shifts in its location surrounding the cervix area, becoming stronger as a woman matures.
However, at a young age, this zone is not yet well developed or strong enough to defend against viruses and other harmful factors.
When girls enter puberty, a vulnerable type of cells, known as columnar cells, covers a certain part of the cervix. Only when we mature does another more protective type of cell, called the squamous epithelium, form a layer over the vulnerable columnar cells.
Thus, if sexual behavior occurs during adolescence, this zone will be much more vulnerable to being attacked by a virus, especially the HPV.
Once attacked by the HPV, the protective layers of the cervix’s outer lining will be removed, exposing the underlying layer to the HPV and allowing a precancerous lesion to more easily develop.
For young girls who don’t yet have protective layers, it’s even more risky.
After sex, there are micro-wounds or tiny abrasions to the full-thickness epithelium. These are like cracked tiles on a roof that allow the HPV to pass through and directly bind to the basement membrane, subsequently spreading the HPV and infecting the tiles of the epithelial cells, especially in the transformation zone. It’s important to understand why the maturity of the cervix matters when exposed to an HPV infection.
With the influence of social media and the internet propagating unhealthy information, there is an emerging concern that our children are engaging in sex at a younger age, even before 14 years of age, varying by family structure, religious status, and socioeconomic status.
A Spanish study revealed that women under the age of 25 were 39 times more likely to engage in sexual activity before the age of 18 than those over the age of 55. This indicates that unhealthy sexual behavior has become more prevalent in younger generations. Similar phenomena have been reported in Brazil.
Therefore, engaging in sexual activity at a young age, having rough sex, or contracting other sexually transmitted infections, can increase the likelihood of HPV entry and infection, thereby increasing the risk of developing cervical cancer during our lifetime.
Age at First Sex Matters
The largest dataset based on a series of multinational case-control etiological studies on cervical cancer was conducted by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) in France and the Institut Català d’Oncologia in Spain.
An etiological study is a study designed to uncover the cause of a disease.
The analysis included 1,864 cases of invasive cervical carcinoma and 1,719 corresponding controls from developing countries: Morocco, Algeria, Philippines, Thailand, India, Brazil, Colombia, Paraguay, and Peru.
Ninety-five percent of the cancer patients and 17 percent of the control group tested positive for HPV DNA. Of those cancer cases, a majority (92 percent), had squamous cell carcinoma.
Engaging in sex for the first time on or before age 16 or between 17 to 20 years of age increased the risk of developing invasive cervical cancer by 2.3 and 1.8 times, respectively, compared with women over the age of 21.
The results remained consistent even after the investigators adjusted the model to include the potential confounding factors of HPV infection status, age, country, lifetime number of sexual partners, parity, and education level.
Another factor to consider is that during adolescence, hormonal changes that particularly increase estrogen levels, can lead to acidification of the vaginal cavity, and when the inner cervical lining turns outward, can cause squamous metaplasia—changes in the epithelial cells that can lead to cancer in the presence of HPV.
Number of sexual partners matters
There are three primary reasons that the number of sexual partners matters with cervical cancer.
Second, most HPV infection is typically mild and transient, resolving on its own within two years. Only 10 to 20 percent of persistent HPV infections potentially lead to cervical cancer. A greater number of lifetime sexual partners has been associated with reduced clearance rates (35 percent) for an HPV infection.
Third, the number of sexual partners is also a significant risk factor for cervical cancer.
In 1989, researchers at Teen Colposcopy Clinic at the University of California–San Francisco published an epidemiological study of risk factors for precancerous lesions of cervical cancer based on an investigation of 14- to 19-year-old women who visited their clinic.
A 2020 published Chinese study retrospectively analyzed 549 female patients and found that the more sexual partners one has, the higher the risk of developing HPV-related cancer.
The group with multiple sexual partners consisted of patients who had more than one male sexual partner in the last six months. The non-multiple sexual partners group included patients with the same male partner, those who were not sexually active in the previous six months, and those who occasionally had sex with the same male partner.
The multiple sexual partners group was significantly associated with a positive HPV outcome, including HPV 16 or 18 and other high-risk types of HPV infections.
They also had a significantly higher percentage of more severe precancerous lesions, particularly CIN-II and CIN-III. CIN refers to cervical intraepithelial neoplasia, the presence of abnormal cell growth (neoplasia) on the surface of the outer lining of the cervix (intraepithelial tissue). It is also known as cervical dysplasia.
Biologically, having multiple sexual partners can contribute to the abnormality of the vaginal composition of microbes, which impacts the persistent status of HPV. It may also result in the introduction of other sexually transmitted pathogens, such as HIV, which is known to harm our immunity and can also increase the risk of cancer.
Age at First Pregnancy Matters
If people tend to have sex at a younger age and have multiple sexual partners, the risk of getting pregnant at an earlier age increases.
Women with a first pregnancy before 21 years of age were shown in a large-scale study to have a two to threefold increased risk of cervical cancer compared with those who had a first pregnancy after 21 years.
Although there was no significant difference across the groups, the data suggested that women with a shorter latency period (age of first sex to first pregnancy of less than two years) may have a slightly higher cervical cancer risk compared with those having a longer gap.
The transformation zone of the cervix is sensitive to hormones, particularly estrogen and progesterone.
Accordingly, both the age at which a woman first engages in sexual activity and the age of her first pregnancy are closely intertwined and together exhibit significantly higher risk estimates for cervical cancer.
Combined oral contraceptives increase cancer risk
To avoid an unplanned pregnancy, many women use oral contraceptives. In July 2023, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the first nonprescription oral contraceptive, Opill, a progestin-only pill. Although it does not contain estrogen and is expected to be available over-the-counter in early 2024, it does come with risks and side effects.
Combined oral contraceptives (containing both estrogen and progestogen) are carcinogenic to humans; this assessment was made partly on the basis of the increased risk for cancer of the cervix.
The review was published in The Lancet in 2007.
Researchers found that the relative risk of cervical cancer significantly increased in current users of oral contraceptives and with a longer duration of use, then declined once use subsided.
For example, 10 years of using oral contraceptives started at around age 20 to 30 years is estimated to increase the cumulative incidence of invasive cervical cancer occurring by age 50 by 13 percent in less developed countries and 18 percent in more developed countries.
Cervical cancer also shares several common risk factors with other cancers, including family cancer history, smoking, and a weakened immune system.
Gardasil 9 Doesn’t Protect Against All High-Risk Strains
While the HPV vaccine is a potential way to prevent HPV infection, it could come with serious unexpected consequences.
According to a 2015 study conducted by the University of Texas, 22 strains of HPV are associated with a high risk of cervical cancer (16, 18, 26, 31, 33, 35, 39, 45, 51, 52, 53, 56, 58, 59, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 73, 82, and IS39), but the HPV quadrivalent vaccine covers only two of them; and Gardasil 9 only covers seven strains.
However, there are also “nonvaccine” strains that pose a high risk for cervical cancer, including, but not limited to, HPV 35, 39, 51, 56, 59, 66, and 68.
When people receive the HPV vaccine, the viral strains not covered by the vaccine may become more prevalent and assume a more dominant role in the cervix of the vaccinated women. This means the HPV vaccine has the potential to trigger changes in vaginal microbiota.
The virus has found ways to escape vaccine-induced immunity.
The same 2015 University of Texas study found that young adult women who received the HPV quadrivalent vaccine exhibited a higher prevalence of a few nonvaccine but high-risk HPV strains than unvaccinated women, including HPV 39, 45, 52, 53, 56, 59, 66, 67, 68, 70, 73, 82.
Among them, HPV 45 and 73 showed a statistically significant increase with a strict analysis.
Consequently, the former group remains at risk for other HPV-related cancers associated with nonvaccine strains.
This is taken from a long document. Read the rest here theepochtimes
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