Cervical cancer elimination in India: Repurposing diagnostics, vaccination, and accelerating policy for the 2030 target.

  • Post category:Gynecologic Cancer
  • Reading time:2 mins read

Journal: Cancer

This opinion article reviews why cervical cancer remains a leading, yet largely preventable, cause of cancer deaths among women in India and outlines practical system-level solutions.

Key points:

  • • Burden: India reports ~127,000 new cervical cancer cases and ~80,000 deaths each year, representing about 20% of the global burden.
  • • Prevention gap:
  • • Screening coverage is extremely low (fewer than 2% of women screened).
  • • HPV vaccination coverage is even lower (less than 1% vaccinated).
  • • This persists despite global advances in HPV vaccination, screening, and molecular diagnostics.
  • • New opportunity – Cervavac:
  • • The launch of an indigenous quadrivalent HPV vaccine (Cervavac) in 2023 has renewed interest in scaling up vaccination.
  • • However, infrastructure limitations, low public awareness, and structural/programmatic barriers remain major obstacles.
  • • Diagnostic and programmatic barriers:
  • • Limited access to organized screening programs.
  • • Inadequate laboratory capacity for HPV testing in many regions.
  • • Gaps in health system coordination needed to reach WHO 2030 elimination targets.
  • • Strategic proposals:
  • • Repurpose COVID-era RT-PCR infrastructure: Use the extensive reverse transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction testing network developed during the COVID-19 pandemic to conduct HPV molecular testing.
  • • Integrate HPV vaccination into the Universal Immunization Program: To ensure sustainable, nationwide, and equitable access for girls.
  • • Include HPV NAAT in the National Essential Diagnostics List: To formalize HPV molecular testing as a standard component of essential diagnostics and facilitate funding and implementation.

Overall, the article argues that leveraging existing laboratory capacity from the COVID-19 response, combined with programmatic integration of HPV vaccination and HPV NAAT, is critical to accelerate India’s progress toward cervical cancer elimination targets by 2030.

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