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No woman left behind: achieving cervical cancer elimination among women living with HIV

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LANCET HIV
卷 10, 期 6, 页码 E412-E420

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ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1016/S2352-3018(23)00082-6

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Cervical cancer is a major concern for women globally, particularly in low-income and middle-income countries and among women with HIV. Eliminating cervical cancer among women with HIV requires addressing both biological and social factors. There is a lack of research and evidence on cervical cancer elimination in this population, particularly in terms of HPV vaccination and its long-term effectiveness. Social and structural factors such as poverty, stigma, and gender discrimination pose challenges to the elimination strategy for cervical cancer.
Cervical cancer is the fourth most common malignancy in women of reproductive age globally. The burden of this disease is highest in low-income and middle-income countries, especially among women living with HIV. In 2018, WHO launched a global strategy to accelerate cervical cancer elimination through rapid scale-up of prophylactic vaccination, cervical screening, and treatment of precancers and cancers. This initiative was key in raising a call for action to address the stark global disparities in cervical cancer burden. However, achieving elimination of cervical cancer among women with HIV requires consideration of biological and social issues affecting this population. This Position Paper shows specific challenges and uncertainties on the way to cervical cancer elimination for women living with HIV and highlights the scarcity of evidence for the effect of interventions in this population. We argue that reaching equity of outcomes for women with HIV will require substantial advances in approaches to HPV vaccination and improved understanding of the long-term effectiveness of HPV vaccines in settings with high HIV burden. Cervical cancer, just as HIV, is affected by social and structural factors such as poverty, stigma, and gender discrimination, that place the elimination strategy at risk. Global efforts must, therefore, be galvanised to ensure women living with HIV have optimised interventions, given their substantial risk of this preventable malignancy.

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