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Free HPV vaccine urged for boys

Boys should have access to free HPV immunization, currently only available for girls, in order to protect more people against cancer, a growing chorus of Canadian doctors say.

$500 immunization covered for girls but not boys

HPV and boys

12 years ago
Duration 2:47
There are increasing calls to offer free HPV vaccinatations to boys, CBC's Kelly Crowe reports
The fastest way to protect females from cervical cancer is to offer HPV vaccination to boys in addition to girls, some doctors say. (Charles Buchanan/Daily Free Press/Associated Press)

Boys should have access to free HPV immunization, currently only available for girls, in order to protect more people against cancer, a growing chorus of Canadian doctors say.

The human papilloma virus, or HPV,causes disease and death from cancer in both men and women. Fornearly five years, girls have been offered theHPV vaccinefor free at vaccination clinics and schools across the country, to protect them from cervical cancer.

This week, the Canadian Cancer Advocacy Coalition called on provinces to pay for the vaccine for boys, too. In January, the National Advisory Committee on Immunization recommended HPV vaccinationfor males aged nine to 25.

P.O.V.

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"Now is the time for governments to apply universal vaccine coverage for our boys and our girls to protect them from disease in the future," the coalition's report concluded.

The more common HPV vaccine, Gardasil, was initially only approved in Canada for use in girls and young women, but Health Canadaexpanded approval to malesin 2010. Another vaccine,Cervarix,is only approvedfor use in females.

Two strains of HPV are thought be responsible for:

  • 80% to 90% of anal cancers.
  • 40% to 50% ofpenile cancers.
  • 35% of oropharyngealcancers.
  • 25% of oral cavity cancers.

"The thought is if we vaccinate men, that will contribute to protecting women as well," said London, Ont.-based physician Marina Salvadori, the Canadian Pediatric Society's representative to the National Advisory Committee on Immunization. "So they don't spread the viruses to each other, both groups are protected from cancer and it's a win-win all round."

Cheaper bulk purchases

Toronto pediatricianMarvin Gans recommends parents buy the vaccine themselves for their sons.

"Certainly, the majority do not do it because it's expensive," said Gans, who tells parents the vaccine helpsprevent many forms of sexually transmitted cancer, but not all of them. The vaccine costs up to $500 for the required three doses.

Salvadori notedgovernments could purchase the vaccine more cheaply in large quantities, and saida preventive approach offers"good bang for the health-care buck."

Candice Hammel of Toronto has a 13-year-old daughter and an 11-year-old son. Hammel plans to have both of them vaccinated.

"I am all for it for both of them," Hammel said.

Toronto parentIan Carmichael agrees it makes sense to vaccinate both sexes.

"I found it odd when they started vaccinating the girls that they didnt vaccinate the other half of the population," he said.

Health officials in several provinces told CBC News theyre reviewing whether to cover theinjections for boys.

With files from CBC's Kelly Crowe and Pauline Dakin