27 June 2024 | Thursday | News
Picture Courtesy | Public Domain
Roche announced that the World Health Organization (WHO) has awarded the cobas® HPV test prequalification designations for use on the cobas® 5800 system and for self-collected samples on the cobas® 5800, 6800 and 8800 systems. These new prequalification designations come just one month after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Roche’s HPV self-collection solution and less than a year after the WHO awarded prequalification to the cobas HPV test on the cobas 6800/8800 systems.
“No woman in the world should die from this preventable disease. These new prequalification designations for our cobas HPV test will create strong momentum in the fight to eliminate cervical cancer,” said Matt Sause, CEO of Roche Diagnostics. “Countries that use the WHO list to make decisions on how to implement national screening programs can now leverage self-collection to further increase access.”
The WHO is focused on the elimination of cervical cancer globally with a strategy of three key goals.2 It seeks to ensure that by 2030, 70% of women are screened using a high-performance test by age 35, and again by age 45. Screening for HPV can help identify women who are at risk of developing cervical cancer, so that the disease can be treated early, before cancer has a chance to develop. In poorer countries, women are often diagnosed with cervical cancer at a more advanced stage, where the chance for a cure is low. The WHO also seeks to ensure that 90% of girls are fully vaccinated against HPV by 15 years of age, and that 90% of those identified with cervical disease receive appropriate treatment.
The cobas HPV test prequalification designations from the WHO help expand access and provide healthcare professionals with greater certainty that their clinical decisions will be based on accurate, reliable results.
Fighting cervical cancer
Roche partners with health systems and governments in more than 55 countries to support their cervical cancer screening programs with the cobas HPV test. As a result of these collaborations, more women have been accessing HPV molecular testing. For example, after just one year of Roche and the Perúvian Ministry of Health working together with other government organisations and patient advocates, more than 300,000 unscreened or underscreened women, some in remote areas of the Amazon rainforest, have been tested for HPV using Roche’s self-collection solution as the primary strategy to expand access.
The cobas HPV test is also part of the Roche Global Access Program, which aims to improve access to cost-effective resources, implement scale-up programs, and contribute to the elimination of diseases in the regions with the greatest need.
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