| Literature DB >> 17923869 |
J J Kim1, B Andres-Beck, S J Goldie.
Abstract
We assessed the cost-effectiveness of including boys vs girls alone in a pre-adolescent vaccination programme against human papillomavirus (HPV) types 16 and 18 in Brazil. Using demographic, epidemiological, and cancer data from Brazil, we developed a dynamic transmission model of HPV infection between males and females. Model-projected reductions in HPV incidence under different vaccination scenarios were applied to a stochastic model of cervical carcinogenesis to project lifetime costs and benefits. We assumed vaccination prevented HPV-16 and -18 infections in individuals not previously infected, and protection was lifelong. Coverage was varied from 0-90% in both genders, and cost per-vaccinated individual was varied from IUSD 25 to 400. At 90% coverage, vaccinating girls alone reduced cancer risk by 63%; including boys at this coverage level provided only 4% further cancer reduction. At a cost per-vaccinated individual of USD 50, vaccinating girls alone was <USD 200 per year of life saved (YLS), while including boys ranged from USD 810-18,650 per YLS depending on coverage. For all coverage levels, increasing coverage in girls was more effective and less costly than including boys in the vaccination programme. In a resource-constrained setting such as Brazil, our results support that the first priority in reducing cervical cancer mortality should be to vaccinate pre-adolescent girls.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17923869 PMCID: PMC2360471 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6604023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1Schematic of dynamic model for females. Females who are uninfected can acquire HPV-16 or -18 infection (at an annual rate of λ16 or λ18, respectively). Once infected, females can develop precancerous lesions (i.e., CIN 1 and CIN 2,3), and over time may develop invasive cervical cancer. Females who clear their infection or lesion develop a degree of natural immunity to that same HPV type (i.e., immune16 or immune18); future type-specific infections can be acquired at a reduced rate (e.g., λ16*(1-immune16)). History of prior infection is tracked throughout the analysis. Note: not all health states and transitions are shown. The model for males has a similar structure for HPV-16 and -18 infection only (the schematic and corresponding model equations can be found in the Supplementary information). Once vaccination is introduced, females and males enter a corresponding vaccinated state; vaccine efficacy is modelled as protection against future type-specific infection.
Figure 2Model output of age-specific prevalence of HPV-16 (upper panel) and HPV-18 (lower panel) among females compared to empirical data. Red dotted line represents model output for the best-fitting set; grey lines represent model output for the next nine best-fitting sets. Black solid lines depict the 95% confidence interval of the empirical data at each age group (Franco ; Molano ; Clifford , 2006).
Figure 3Model output of age-specific incidence of cervical cancer (HPV-16 and-18 associated only) compared to empirical data. Red dotted line represents model output for the best-fitting set; grey lines represent model output for the next nine best-fitting sets. Black solid lines depict the 95% confidence interval of the empirical data at each age group (International Agency for Research on Cancer, 1976; Clifford , 2003b, 2006).
Clinical benefits and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios by vaccine coverage and cost per-vaccinated individuala
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| Girls only | 14 | Cost-saving | 70 | 610 | 3450 |
| Girls and boys | 21 | 110 | 810 | 2190 | 9370 |
| Girls only | 29 | Cost-saving | 30 | 540 | 3210 |
| Girls and boys | 40 | 660 | 1740 | 3900 | 15 120 |
| Girls only | 45 | Cost-saving | 130 | 740 | 3940 |
| Girls and boys | 57 | 2440 | 2180 | 4860 | 18 820 |
| Girls only | 63 | Cost-saving | 170 | 810 | 4180 |
| Girls and boys | 67 | 9110 | 18 650 | 37 720 | 136 910 |
Values represent incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (additional cost divided by additional health benefit compared to the next best strategy) expressed as cost per year of life saved (international dollar per YLS). Strategies including girls alone were compared to no vaccination.
Reduction in lifetime cancer risk for all strategies was calculated against no vaccination.
Cost per-vaccinated individual includes three doses, wastage, delivery, and programmatic costs, and is expressed in 2000 international dollars.
Strategies are cost-saving compared to no vaccination because the future costs averted by preventing cancer are greater than the cost of vaccination.
Tradeoff of increasing vaccine coverage of girls versus including boysa
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| No vaccination | — | 58.47 | 39.9442 | — |
| Increase girls: girls only (50%) | 29 | 59.87 | 39.9928 | 30 |
| Girls only (25%) | 14 | 60.05 | 39.9671 | Dominated |
| Add boys: girls (25%)+boys (25%) | 21 | 67.33 | 39.9761 | Dominated |
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| No vaccination | — | 58.47 | 39.9442 | — |
| Girls only (75%) | 45 | 66.34 | 40.0051 | 130 |
| Increase girls: girls only (90%) | 63 | 71.20 | 40.0213 | 300 |
| Add boys: girls (75%)+boys (25%) | 48 | 76.23 | 40.0110 | Dominated |
| Add boys: girls (75%)+boys (50%) | 52 | 86.86 | 40.0135 | Dominated |
| Add boys: girls (75%)+boys (75%) | 57 | 96.72 | 40.0191 | Dominated |
I$=international dollar; YLS=years of life saved. Analysis assumed cost per-vaccinated individual of $50 (i.e., $12 per dose). Strategies are listed by increasing total cost.
Reduction in lifetime cancer risk for all strategies was calculated against no vaccination.
'Dominated' strategies were more costly and less effective (i.e., strongly dominated) than an alternative strategy of covering girls alone.