Before the first symptom, before the first fear: What every young woman should know about cervical cancer
Cervical cancer is often misunderstood as a disease that announces itself loudly with pain, discomfort, or visible warning signs. In reality, it is one of the few cancers that develops quietly, sometimes over years, sometimes without any loud symptoms. This is precisely why timely screening matter more than fear.
For many young women, conversations around cervical cancer feel irrelevant, something to think about only if there are symptoms. But medical evidence tells us otherwise. Cervical cancer is primarily caused by persistent infection with high-risk strains of the Human Papillomavirus (HPV), a common virus that most people are exposed to soon after becoming sexually active.
“HPV infection is extremely common, and in most cases, the body clears it on its own. Problems arise only when high-risk strains persist over time without detection,” explains Dr. Jyoti Wadhwa, Principal Lead, Medical & Precision Oncology, Apollo Athenaa, Women’s Cancer Centres. “That’s why screening before symptoms appear is crucial.”
This cancer is highly preventable and easily detectable in the preinvasive phase itself. Regular screening through Pap smears and HPV testing can detect pre-cancerous changes long before they turn into cancer.
“Screening allows us to identify abnormal cells early, when treatment is simple and highly effective,” says Dr Wadhwa.
HPV vaccination is another powerful preventive tool against the most common high-risk HPV strains.
Cervical cancer awareness is not about creating panic; it’s about empowering women with information, choice, and control over their health. Regular screening, timely HPV vaccination, and open conversations with healthcare providers can dramatically reduce the burden of this disease.
Before the first symptom appears. Before fear takes over. Cervical cancer prevention begins with awareness and the decision to act early.
(This is an authored article by Dr. Jyoti Wadhwa, Principal Lead, Medical & Precision Oncology, Apollo Athenaa Women’s Cancer Centres)
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“HPV infection is extremely common, and in most cases, the body clears it on its own. Problems arise only when high-risk strains persist over time without detection,” explains Dr. Jyoti Wadhwa, Principal Lead, Medical & Precision Oncology, Apollo Athenaa, Women’s Cancer Centres. “That’s why screening before symptoms appear is crucial.”
Why Cervical Cancer Often Goes Unnoticed?
In its early stages, cervical cancer rarely causes pain or discomfort. Symptoms such as abnormal bleeding, pelvic pain, or discomfort during intercourse usually appear only when the disease has progressed. Treatment turns more complex at this stage.This cancer is highly preventable and easily detectable in the preinvasive phase itself. Regular screening through Pap smears and HPV testing can detect pre-cancerous changes long before they turn into cancer.
“Screening allows us to identify abnormal cells early, when treatment is simple and highly effective,” says Dr Wadhwa.
When should young women start screening?
One of the most common myths is that cervical cancer screening is only necessary after marriage or childbirth. However, medical guidelines recommend that women begin screening from the age of 21, regardless of age of onset of sexual activity. “Delaying screening often means missing the window for early intervention,” clarifies Dr. Wadhwa.HPV vaccination is another powerful preventive tool against the most common high-risk HPV strains.
Shifting from fear to informed action
Fear often stems from the unknown. Many women avoid screening because they associate cancer checks with bad news. In reality, most abnormal screening results are manageable and do not mean cancer. “The goal is reassurance, not alarm,” says Dr. Wadhwa, “Most women we see through screening go back with clarity, confidence, and peace of mind.”Cervical cancer awareness is not about creating panic; it’s about empowering women with information, choice, and control over their health. Regular screening, timely HPV vaccination, and open conversations with healthcare providers can dramatically reduce the burden of this disease.
Before the first symptom appears. Before fear takes over. Cervical cancer prevention begins with awareness and the decision to act early.
(This is an authored article by Dr. Jyoti Wadhwa, Principal Lead, Medical & Precision Oncology, Apollo Athenaa Women’s Cancer Centres)
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