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Cervical cancer rates are on the rise among younger women, owing in part to a lack of awareness, screening and prevention. A new study found that the percentage of women screened for cervical ...
New research suggests that an “often-overlooked” parasitic infection, already linked to bladder cancer, may also raise the risk of cervical cancer.
Cervical cancer is not hereditary and is primarily influenced by social and lifestyle factors, particularly sexual activity, ...
Keytruda (pembrolizumab) was given an accelerated approval in 2018 as a second-line therapy for PD-L1-positive cervical cancer, but the new survival data – from the phase 3 KEYNOTE-826 trial ...
A parasitic disease, already known to cause bladder cancer, may also influence cervical cancer risk.(Shutterstock) The research, shared at the ESCMID Global 2025 conference on April 12 ...