HPV early detection test created

Published: Oct. 31, 2007 at 12:44 PM

AMES, Iowa, Oct. 31 (UPI) -- U.S. scientists have developed a technology that can detect a single molecule of the virus associated with female cervical cancer.

Iowa State University Professor Edward Yeung and colleagues said their achievement represents a significant improvement over the current test for the human papillomavirus that requires 10 to 50 virus molecules for detection.

"We are always interested in detecting smaller and smaller amounts of material at lower and lower concentrations," Yeung said. "Detecting lower levels means earlier diagnosis."

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports the human papillomavirus is one of the most common sexually transmitted infections in the United States, infecting about 6.2 million Americans every year.

Yeung said single molecule detection of the virus could help women and families decide to be vaccinated. He said vaccines administered after such early detection could still have time to stop the virus.

The discovery by Yeung, doctoral student Jiangwei Li, and former doctoral students Ji-Young Lee appears in the journal Analytical Chemistry.

© 2007 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
NBA: Oklahoma City 102, Orlando 74 (17 min)
Kurt Busch wins Dickies 500 in Texas
NHL: Atlanta 3, St. Louis 2 (SO)
NFL: Seattle 32, Detroit 20
NFL: San Diego 21, New York Giants 20
NFL: Tennessee 34, San Francisco 27
NFL: New Orleans 30, Carolina 20
fark
Photoshop theme: Elderly superheros or supervillains
Suicidal, gold-medal winning, former Naval Academy water polo star plunges 212 feet off the GWB...
NY Times reporter tries to learn about Scientology by taking their free personality test. All goes...
A Woman and her two sons live in a rusty 1973 Suburban in Los Angeles. Fark: She's 97 and her sons...
Pro-rape group sets up pro-rape page on Facebook. They like pro-rape
American cities on verge of rat invasion