India's Push to Eliminate Cervical Cancer: Vaccination & DNA Screening Key

Indian health officials have declared the elimination of cervical cancer an achievable public health goal, emphasizing a multi-pronged national strategy. The plan focuses on rapidly expanding vaccination against the Human Papillomavirus (HPV) and strengthening screening, particularly through high-performance HPV DNA testing. A national summit at AIIMS concluded with a call to action, aiming to create scalable implementation models and streamline care pathways. The initiative seeks to ensure timely diagnosis and equitable, high-quality treatment for women across the country.

Key Points: India's Strategy to Eliminate Cervical Cancer: HPV Vaccine & DNA Tests

  • Scale HPV vaccination nationwide
  • Strengthen HPV DNA-based screening
  • Implement self-sampling methods
  • Establish uniform national treatment protocols
3 min read

HPV vaccination, DNA-based screening key to fight cervical cancer in India: Govt

Health Ministry officials outline plan to eliminate cervical cancer in India through expanded HPV vaccination and DNA-based screening at national summit.

"Cervical cancer elimination is an achievable goal for India, and we are fully committed to accelerating action across prevention, screening, and treatment. - Aradhana Patnaik"

New Delhi, Jan 17

Vaccination against the Human Papillomavirus as well as improving access to DNA-based screening is crucial to eliminate cervical cancer in India, said officials from the Health Ministry on Saturday.

The experts were speaking at India's first national summit organised by AIIMS to accelerate the cervical cancer elimination agenda.

Aradhana Patnaik, Additional Secretary and Managing Director, National Health Mission (NHM), Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, reaffirmed the government's unwavering commitment to eliminating cervical cancer as a public health problem.

"Cervical cancer elimination is an achievable goal for India, and we are fully committed to accelerating action across prevention, screening, and treatment," said Patnaik.

"Our focus is on rapidly expanding HPV vaccination, strengthening screening at all levels -- particularly through high-performance methods such as HPV DNA testing -- to ensure timely access to diagnosis and treatment for every woman. With stronger systems, clear operational protocols, and sustained partnerships across states and stakeholders, we can make cervical cancer elimination a reality and safeguard the health of millions of women across the country," she added.

Prof Dr V.K. Paul, Member (Health), NITI Aayog, stated that "India has a historic opportunity to eliminate cervical cancer, but it requires speed, scale and system-wide alignment".

He highlighted the need for evidence-based implementation models.

"We must initiate pilot projects that demonstrate how HPV DNA-based screening and self-sampling can be implemented on scale, particularly across primary healthcare platforms. These insights will help India build a national model that ensures women everywhere benefit from timely screening, accurate diagnostics, and seamless follow-up," Paul added.

Organised by the Departments of Radiation Oncology, Surgical Oncology, and Onco-Anaesthesia & Palliative Medicine, DRBRAIRCH at AIIMS, the Summit focused on the three key pillars.

Starting with scaling HPV vaccination to strengthening screening through high-performance HPV DNA testing, the event focused on boosting self-sampling methods and closing the loop with effective cancer care.

The summit also delved into establishing uniform national SOPs, enabling hub-and-spoke care models, and streamlining treatment and follow-up pathways to ensure equitable, high-quality care nationwide.

"Cervical cancer can no longer be addressed in silos. Convening government, clinicians, innovators, and patient advocates is key to creating the momentum and accountability needed to accelerate prevention, early detection, and effective treatment," said Dr Abhishek Shankar, Assistant Professor, Department of Radiation Oncology, DRBRAIRCH at AIIMS.

"Through this initiative, we aim to define clear, actionable recommendations that will shape India's roadmap to cervical cancer elimination," he added.

The Summit brought together over 500 participants, including representatives from AIIMS campuses nationwide, state health departments, cancer institutes, WHO, UNICEF, ICMR, civil society organisations, and industry partners, and concluded with a National Call to Action outlining priority steps to accelerate India's cervical cancer elimination roadmap.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Rohit P
Good to see the government taking this seriously. But the real challenge will be implementation at the grassroots, especially in villages. We have great plans on paper, but will the vaccines and DNA test kits reach every anganwadi and primary health centre? Hope they follow through.
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Anjali F
As a mother of two daughters, I fully support this. We need to break the stigma around talking about reproductive health. The HPV vaccine should be part of the universal immunization program. Let's protect our future generations.
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Siddharth J
While the intent is commendable, I have a respectful criticism. The article mentions "sustained partnerships" and "streamlining pathways". We've heard this before. What's the concrete timeline? What's the budget allocation? Without transparent targets and funding, summits often don't lead to action on the ground.
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Meera T
The hub-and-spoke model mentioned is smart. AIIMS and major cancer institutes can be hubs, training staff at district hospitals (spokes). This can build capacity nationwide. Technology for DNA testing and telemedicine for follow-ups can really help. A positive step!
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David E
Working in public health, I see the potential here. India's scale makes this ambitious, but if successful, it could be a model for other LMICs. The key is integrating this into existing primary healthcare systems so it's not a standalone, vertical program.

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