But Donald Trump has his own cancer cure
Cancers caused by the human papillomavirus (HPV) affect both men and women in large numbers, but prevention efforts initially focused on women (see related CIDRAP News story today). A retrospective cohort study published last week in JAMA Oncology suggests that vaccinating boys and young men with the nine-valent (nine-strain) HPV vaccine can meaningfully reduce their risk of related cancers, supporting the case for sex-neutral vaccination programs.HPV vaccination has long been framed as a way to prevent
cervical cancer in women, but the virus causes a range of cancers that affect
men, including head and neck, anal, and penile cancers. In the study,
researchers from the Nara Prefecture General Medical Center in Nara, Japan,
looked at large-scale population data to evaluate the effectiveness of the
nine-valent HPV vaccine in preventing these cancers in men.

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