Today, Australian teen and pre-teen boys will become the first in the world to receive Gardasil, the cervical cancer vaccine.
Australian boys aged 12-13 will be vaccinated at schools around the country from today. Boys aged 14-15 will also be vaccinated in the coming months as part of a free program.
So, why are boys receiving the cervical cancer vaccine when they don’t actually have a cervix?
Fair question.
Gardasil – commonly called the cervical cancer vaccine – was developed by Australian of the Year, Professor Ian Frazer after years of studying Human Papillomavirus (HPV). The vaccine protects against four strains of HPV including HPV16 and HPV-18, which are responsible for almost three quarters of cervical cancer cases in women and also most of the cases of penile, anal, vulvar and vaginal cancers.
Of course, men can get anal and penile cancers, which are relatively rare but potentially deadly. Men can also pass on the HPV virus to their partners – who can get cervical cancer. HPV is also spread by oral sex and can cause HPV-related tonsil cancers – which happen almost as frequently in men, as the cervical cancers do in women.
These ‘peripheral’ cancers are not always nearly so deadly as cervical cancer (which kills hundreds of thousands of women each year) but they can still cause major health problems and occasionally death.