$1.6M for HPV fight in PNG

RESEARCHERS at the Kirby Institute at the University of New South Wales, Sydney, have been awarded $A1.59 million to pursue the elimination of cervical cancer in rural Papua New Guinea.
$1.6M for HPV fight in PNG $1.6M for HPV fight in PNG $1.6M for HPV fight in PNG $1.6M for HPV fight in PNG $1.6M for HPV fight in PNG

Staff Reporter

Professor Andrew Vallely from the institute will lead a project on human papillomavirus (HPV) testing and treatment for the elimination of cervical cancer in rural and remote PNG.
 
Funding for the project is part of a $5.9 million investment announced by Australian Health Minister Greg Hunt last week for cancer prevention among women in vulnerable communities across the world through the Global Alliance for Chronic Diseases (GACD).
 
The project builds on an initiative announced earlier in the year by the Kirby Institute to co-lead a new cervical cancer elimination program in the Western Pacific.
 
Vallely said: "In our earlier field trials in Papua New Guinea, we developed a new ‘test and treat' screening model. It comprised HPV testing of self-collected vaginal specimens followed by same-day treatment using a new battery operated, portable thermal ablation device. This proved highly effective, acceptable and cost-effective.
 
"Building on these findings we will now establish how best to reach women in rural and remote communities, where cervical pre-cancer and cancer rates are highest, access to health services most constrained, and the majority of women at risk in PNG and other high-burden, low-resource countries live."
 
The new project involves partners from the Papua New Guinea Institute of Medical Research; the NHMRC Centre for Research Excellence in Cervical Cancer Control: Kirby Institute, Cancer Council NSW and VCS Foundation; Royal Women's Hospital, Melbourne; and health authorities in Western Highlands Province and Madang, Papua New Guinea.
 
PNG Institute of Medical Research director Professor William Pomat said: "This award builds on more than a decade of collaborative research on cervical screening and cancer prevention in PNG. I am delighted that we now have an opportunity to continue to drive the elimination agenda forward together with partners in PNG and Australia, and to obtain the critical evidence required to ensure no woman in PNG is left behind."
 
Professor Karen Canfell, who is director of the Daffodil Centre, Cancer Council NSW, welcomed the new award.
 
"We are thrilled to be part of this new project that will complement the work we are doing together to advance cervical cancer elimination in our region," Canfell said. 
 

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