During the debate, Rep. Michele
Bachmann of Minnesota criticized Texas Gov. Rick Perry for mandating that
sixth-grade girls in his state get the HPV vaccine to prevent cervical cancer
later in life. On television the next day, Bachmann, who had argued that the
order violated individual rights, also said she had heard from a mother she met
that the vaccine had caused mental retardation in the woman's 12-year-old
daughter.
That's unlikely, experts said.
"This is a very safe vaccine,"
said infectious disease expert Dr. Marc Siegel, an associate professor of
medicine at New York University. "The benefit of this vaccine so outweighs
any rare risk that it's not worth considering side effects.
"What is going on right
now," added Siegel, "is a political backlash against the whole idea
of vaccines. You are seeing vicious rumors circulating because of the
debate."
The American Academy of Pediatrics
also tried to squelch concerns over the vaccine's safety.
"There is absolutely no scientific
validity to this statement. Since the vaccine has been introduced, more than 35
million doses have been administered, and it has an excellent safety
record," Dr. O. Marion Burton, academy president, said in a news release.
Dr. Judy Schaechter, an associate
professor of pediatrics at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine,
said, "We have not seen any cases of mental retardation caused by this
vaccine and there is no reason to suspect that that would happen.
"For mental retardation to start
in any 12-year-old is an odd occurrence," she said. "I don't have an
explanation for that -- I've never seen it as an adolescent medicine doctor.
There is nothing in science or experience that would back that up."
Perry signed an executive order in
2007 requiring that all sixth-grade girls be vaccinated to protect them from
the sexually transmitted virus, but the state legislature subsequently
rescinded the order.
The HPV vaccine, approved in 2006,
targets two types of HPV that cause 70 percent of cervical cancers and most
HPV-induced genital and head and neck cancers. It also protects against most
genital warts.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention recommends that girls at age 11 or 12 get three doses (shots) of
the HPV vaccine, also often called the Gardasil vaccine, and that girls and young women 13 to 26 years old
get all three doses if they have not already.
"The best way to be sure that a
person gets the most benefit from HPV vaccination is to complete all three
doses before sexual activity begins," the CDC said.
Each year in the United States,
about 6.2 million new cases of human papillomavirus are diagnosed, and about
4,000 women die from cervical cancer, according to the CDC.
Side effects of the vaccine tend to
be minor, the CDC said. They include pain at the injection site, headache,
nausea, and fever. Fainting has been reported on rare occasions.
Some cases of Guillain-Barre
Syndrome (GBS), a rare disorder that causes muscle weakness, have been reported
after vaccination, but "there is no evidence that Gardasil has increased
the rate of GBS above that expected in the population," the CDC said.
Blood clots in the heart, lungs and
legs also have been reported, but "most of these people had a risk of
getting blood clots, such as taking oral contraceptives," according to the
CDC.
After reviewing 56 deaths that
followed vaccination, the CDC said it could not find a pattern suggesting the
vaccine was responsible. Autopsy and death records pointed to other factors,
including illicit drug use, diabetes, viral illness and heart failure, the
agency said.
Others, however, remain unconvinced
of the vaccine's safety.
Barbara Loe Fisher, co-founder and
president of the National Vaccine Information Center, an anti-vaccine group,
said that the HPV vaccine "can cause brain and immune system dysfunction
that takes various forms, including memory loss and inflammation of the
brain."
But Fisher said that assessment was
based on anecdotal evidence. "I don't know how common it is," she
said.
Her website reports six cases of
adverse reactions to the vaccine, none of which include mental retardation.
But, "to suggest that it does not happen is inaccurate," she said.
Siegel does not disagree that brain
inflammation can occur, but he said it is rare. "Encephalitis (swelling of
the brain) is a remote and rare side effect of many vaccines, including the flu
vaccine," he said. "It is more common in live virus vaccines, which
HPV is not."
A recent Institute of Medicine
report, sponsored by the Department of Health and Human Services, also said
severe reactions were rare.
In the United States, two HPV
vaccines are available, Cervarix, made by GlaxoSmithKline, and Gardasil, made by Merck &
Co.
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