| Booklet: What You Need to Know about
Cervical Cancer |
![[National Cancer Institute Logo]](../../images/ncilogo_nobar.gif) |
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Cause and Prevention
By studying large numbers of women all over the world, researchers have
identified certain risk factors that increase the chance that cells in the
cervix will become abnormal or cancerous. They believe that, in many cases,
cervical cancer develops when two or more risk factors act together.
Research has shown that women who began having sexual intercourse before
age 18 and women who have had many sexual partners have an increased risk of
developing cervical cancer. Women also are at increased risk if their
partners began having sexual intercourse at a young age, have had many
sexual partners, or were previously married to women who had cervical
cancer.
Scientists do not know exactly why the sexual practices of women and
their partners affect the risk of developing cervical cancer. However,
research suggests that some sexually transmitted viruses can cause
cells in the cervix to begin the series of changes that can lead to cancer.
Women who have had many sexual partners or whose partners have had many
sexual partners may have an increased risk for cervical cancer at least in
part because they are more likely to get a sexually transmitted virus.
Scientists are studying the effects of sexually transmitted human
papillomaviruses (HPVs). Some sexually transmitted HPVs cause
genital warts (condylomata
acuminata). In addition, scientists believe that some of these
viruses may cause the growth of abnormal cells in the cervix and may play a
role in cancer development. They have found that women who have HPV or whose
partners have HPV have a higher-than-average risk of developing cervical
cancer. However, most women who are infected with HPV do not develop
cervical cancer, and the virus is not present in all women who have this
disease. For these reasons, scientists believe that other factors act
together with HPVs. For example, the genital herpes
virus also may play a role. Further research is needed to learn the
exact role of these viruses and how they act together with other factors in
the development of cervical cancer.
Smoking also increases the risk of cancer of the cervix, although it is
not clear exactly how or why. The risk appears to increase with the number
of cigarettes a woman smokes each day and with the number of years she has
smoked.
Women whose mothers were given the drug diethylstilbestrol
(DES) during pregnancy to prevent miscarriage also are at increased risk.
(This drug was used for this purpose from about 1940 to 1970.) A rare type
of vaginal and cervical cancer has been found in a small number of women
whose mothers used DES.
Several reports suggest that women whose immune systems are weakened are
more likely than others to develop cervical cancer. For example, women who
have the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), which causes AIDS, are at
increased risk. Also, organ transplant patients, who receive drugs that
suppress the immune system to prevent rejection of the new organ, are more
likely than others to develop precancerous lesions.
Some researchers believe that there is an increased risk of cervical
cancer in women who use oral contraceptives (the pill). However, scientists
have not found that the pill directly causes cancer of the cervix. This
relationship is hard to prove because the two main risk factors for cervical
cancer--intercourse at an early age and multiple sex partners--may be more
common among women who use the pill than among those who do not. Still, oral
contraceptive labels warn of this possible risk and advise women who use
them to have yearly Pap tests.
Some research has shown that vitamin A may play a role in stopping or
preventing cancerous changes in cells like those on the surface of the
cervix. Further research with forms of vitamin A may help scientists learn
more about preventing cancer of the cervix.
At present, early detection and treatment of precancerous tissue remain
the most effective ways of preventing cervical cancer. Information about
early detection appears in the Early Detection section. Women should talk
with their doctors about an appropriate schedule of checkups. The doctor's
advice will be based on such factors as the women's age, medical history,
and risk factors.
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