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Statement of Diana Zuckerman, Ph.D.
President, National Research Center for Women & Families
At the April 9, Public Oversight Hearing, Committee on Health
Proposed Fiscal Year 2010 Budget for the Department of Health
I am pleased to have the opportunity to testify as president
of the National Research Center for Women & Families.
Our Center is dedicated to improving the health and safety of
adults and children, and we do that by scrutinizing medical and
scientific research to determine what is known and not known about
specific treatments and prevention strategies, and to compare
their safety and effectiveness.
I was trained in epidemiology at Yale Medical School. I have worked
on federal health policy issues in Congress, the White House,
the Institute of Medicine, and for nonprofit organizations for
25 years. In addition, I am a fellow at the University of Pennsylvania
Center for Bioethics.
Like all of you, I am interested in the health and safety of D.C.’s
citizens, and like many of you I was, until recently, strongly
in favor of mandating the HPV vaccine for girls. Who among us
wouldn’t gladly immunize our daughters to protect them from cervical
cancer?
I am here today to share with you some research information that
I have only recently uncovered and draw attention to a number
of unanswered questions regarding Gardasil, the only HPV vaccine
currently available in the U.S. This research information is available
on the FDA web site but most of it is not published yet.
As most of you know, Gardasil protects against two types of Humanpapilloma
Viruses (HPV) that cause genital warts and two types of HPV that
cause cervical cancer. Almost all HPV viruses go away by themselves
– just like a cold virus goes away by itself. The goal of the
vaccine is to protect the less than 10% of girls and women for
whom HPV does not go away by itself.
In clinical trials, Gardasil has been shown to be 100% effective
against those 4 HPVs – but not for very long. The FDA approved
Gardasil based on about 2-3 years of data! Even Merck, the vaccine’s
manufacturer admits that, “the duration of protection of Gardasil
has not been established.” All that we know now is that it stimulates
short-term protection against various strains of HPV and certain
kinds of lesions known to be precursors of cervical cancer.
There is new evidence that if Gardasil is given to 12 year old
girls, they will not be well protected when they are 16 or 17:
1. Just three years after being vaccinated with Gardasil, one-third
of the girls had lost all their antibodies to one of the two
strains of HPV that can lead to cervical cancer—HPV 18. Girls
with antibodies to HPV are protected against HPV. Those without
probably aren’t.
2. Older teenagers who were already exposed to HPV but didn’t
have active infections when vaccinated benefited as much as 12
year olds
3. Teenage girls and young women who were exposed to HPV through
sexual contact had as many or more antibodies against HPV as those
who were vaccinated. Since not all girls are exposed to HPV and
about 90% of HPV infections go away by themselves without any
risk of cancer, the vaccine is providing protection to less than
10% of all vaccinated girls.
4. In their studies, Merck gave a booster shot to all the girls
and young women 5 years after they were vaccinated with Gardasil.
Then they measured their antibodies and reported how high they
were after 5 years – but they don’t sell anything called booster
shots for HPV and they have never advertised or publicly discussed
the need for a booster shot.
5. Gardasil is the most expensive vaccine in the world, consisting
of 3 shots that cost between $400 and $1,000. The booster shot
in the Merck study was a repeat of the first Gardasil shot and
costs at least $150.
When the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended
Gardasil for young girls, they didn’t have all this research information.
They assumed the vaccine would last forever, not for just a few
years. They believed Merck – as we all did – that it was important
to vaccinate young girls before they were sexually active. But that
doesn’t seem to be true.
Instead, if we vaccinate 12 year old girls, we will probably
have to vaccinate them with a booster shot when they are 16 or 17.
In fact, they might need another booster shot every 5 years for
the rest of their lives.
Most women in Washington are unlikely to be able to afford those
expensive HPV booster shots every 5 years. If they don’t get them,
however, they will no longer be protected from cervical cancer at
an age when they are most likely to get it.
What can we do about this? The good news is that there is another
HPV vaccine that has been shown to last longer – more than 6 years.
It is already approved in 66 other countries. However, it is still
being analyzed by the FDA so we don’t yet know if it is really that
effective.
The other good news is that if the DC government decides
to delay any kind of HPV vaccine program for a year, that will not
harm our girls. The reason it won’t harm them is that Gardasil
seems to work even better if it is given to older girls and young
women, instead of 12-year olds.
So, as a budget matter, I strongly urge you to delay implementing
an HPV vaccine program for another year, until data are available
to tell you which HPV vaccine is more effective and more cost effective.
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