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Not obviously. For example, from ninininino's comment in this post:

For anyone actually wanting real probabilities, a quick google on colorectal which the article mentions as the most common cancer for young men:

"For example, 1 out of every 333,000 15-to-19-year-olds developed colorectal cancer in 1999. Colorectal cancer became more common by 2020, when 1 out of every 77,000 teens"

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Pretty difficult to blame a vaccine that wasn't in use yet for a 4.32x increase in colorectal cancer rates in teens.




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