| Literature DB >> 27230391 |
Suzanne M Garland1, Susanne K Kjaer2, Nubia Muñoz3, Stan L Block4, Darron R Brown5, Mark J DiNubile6, Brianna R Lindsay6, Barbara J Kuter6, Gonzalo Perez7, Geraldine Dominiak-Felden8, Alfred J Saah6, Rosybel Drury8, Rituparna Das6, Christine Velicer6.
Abstract
Prophylactic human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination programs constitute major public health initiatives worldwide. We assessed the global effect of quadrivalent HPV (4vHPV) vaccination on HPV infection and disease. PubMed and Embase were systematically searched for peer-reviewed articles from January 2007 through February 2016 to identify observational studies reporting the impact or effectiveness of 4vHPV vaccination on infection, anogenital warts, and cervical cancer or precancerous lesions. Over the last decade, the impact of HPV vaccination in real-world settings has become increasingly evident, especially among girls vaccinated before HPV exposure in countries with high vaccine uptake. Maximal reductions of approximately 90% for HPV 6/11/16/18 infection, approximately 90% for genital warts, approximately 45% for low-grade cytological cervical abnormalities, and approximately 85% for high-grade histologically proven cervical abnormalities have been reported. The full public health potential of HPV vaccination is not yet realized. HPV-related disease remains a significant source of morbidity and mortality in developing and developed nations, underscoring the need for HPV vaccination programs with high population coverage.Entities:
Keywords: CIN; Gardasil/Silgard; HPV vaccination; cervical cancer; genital warts
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27230391 PMCID: PMC4967609 DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciw354
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Infect Dis ISSN: 1058-4838 Impact factor: 9.079
Figure 1.PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) diagram. Details of literature search and extraction for our systematic review. Abbreviation: HPV, human papillomavirus.
Summary of Publications Reporting the Impact and Effectiveness of Quadrivalent Human Papillomavirus Vaccination Programs in 9 Countries
| Country (No. of Included Publications) and HPV Vaccination Program | Publications (No.) per Endpointa | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genital Warts | HPV Infection | Cervical Cytological Abnormalities | Cervical Histological Abnormalities | |
|
Since April 2007: ongoing publicly funded school-based national program, girls aged 12–13 y Up to December 2009: school-based catch-up for females aged 12–17 y and community-based catch-up for women aged 18–26 y Since February 2013: ongoing school-based national program for boys aged 12–13 y, with catch-up 14–15 y in 2013–2014b | Fairley 2009 [A29] | Tabrizi 2012 [A4], 2014 [A5] | Brotherton 2011 [A53] | Brotherton 2011 [A53] |
| … | … | |||
|
November 2007: females 12–15 y reimbursed End of 2008: reimbursement extended to age 18 y Since 2010/2011: school-based, girls aged 12–13 y | Dominiak-Felden 2015 [A17] | Merckx 2014 [A14] | ||
| … | ||||
|
Since 2007–2009: school-based, targeting girls grades 4–8 in all provinces/territories | Smith 2015 [A20] | Mahmud 2014 [A47] | Ogilvie 2015 [A58] | |
| … | ||||
|
2006: licensed October 2008: 1st catch-up, females aged 13–15 y, free Since 2009: females aged 12 y, free August 2012: 2nd catch-up, females aged ≤27 y old | Baandrup 2013 [A25] | Baldur-Felskov 2014 [A48, A51] | Baldur-Felskov 2014 [A48, A51], 2015 [A52] | |
| … | … | … | ||
|
Initially: recommended for females ≥14 y old with no prior sexual intercourse or within 1st year following sexual debut Since September 2012: recommended in females aged 11–14 y, with catch-up for females 15–19 y | Judlin 2015 [A32] | |||
| … | … | |||
|
Since 2007: females aged 13–17, free | Mikolajczyk 2013 [A35] | Delere 2014 [A2] | ||
| … | … | … | ||
|
September 2008: vaccine available February 2009: school program for females aged 12–13 y, with catch-up until 2010 for females <20 y | Oliphant 2011 [A36] | |||
| … | ||||
|
2006–2011: public subsidy for on-demand vaccination, females aged 13–17 y Since 2012: organized, publicly funded school-based vaccination of females aged 10–12 y with catch-up for females 13–18 y | Leval 2012 [A33], 2013 [A19] | Soderlund-Strand 2014 [A13] | Herweijer 2016 [A50] | |
| … | ||||
|
Since 2006: US Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommended routine vaccination for females aged ≥11 y | Bauer 2012 [A26] | Cummings 2012 [A1] | Jamal 2013 [A56] | |
Abbreviations: HPV, human papillomavirus vaccine; y, years.
a Publications may appear in >1 column if the study addresses >1 outcome. Please see Supplementary Table 2 in Supplementary Appendix II for detailed citations.
b National HPV Vaccination Program Register. Preliminary estimates of HPV vaccination coverage for males—school-based program, first year of program delivery (2013). Available at: http://www.hpvregister.org.au/research/coverage-data/preliminary-estimates-male-hpv-coverage-2013. Accessed 27 April 2015.
c Although included here in the original literature search, this citation did not actually provide data relevant to HPV infection.
Figure 2.Impact and effectiveness of quadrivalent human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination on prevalence of vaccine genotypes. A, Percentage reduction of prevalent HPV 6/11/16/18 infection among vaccinated females compared with prevaccine era or contemporaneous unvaccinated females. B, Percentage reduction of prevalent HPV 6/11/16/18 infection in vaccine era compared with prevaccine era. C, Percentage reduction of prevalent HPV 16/18 infection in vaccine era compared with prevaccine era or contemporaneous unvaccinated females. D, Percentage reduction of prevalent HPV 6/11 infection in vaccine era compared with prevaccine era. In Panel A, “2-doses” refers to an incomplete 3-dose schedule and not a primary 2-dose schedule. More details of the studies shown in the panels of Figure 2 are provided at the end of Supplementary Appendix II.
Selected Examples of Percentage of Reduction in the Prevalence of Genital Warts in the Vaccine Era Compared to the Prevaccine Era or in Vaccinated Females Compared With Contemporaneous Unvaccinated Females
| Country | Supplementary Reference | Setting | % Reduction in Genital Warts |
|---|---|---|---|
| Australia (high vaccine uptake) | Chow 2015 [A27] | Melbourne Sexual Health Centre, Victoria, within 7 y after start of vaccine era | 45% annually among females <21 y |
| Smith 2016 [A43] | Hospital admissions for genital warts from national database, within 4 y after start of vaccine era | 85%–87%, 10–19 y | |
| Donovan 2011 [A28] | National surveillance, within 2 y after start of vaccine era | 59%, 12–26 y | |
| Denmark | Bollerup 2016 [A42] | National prescription inpatient/outpatient registries, within 5 y after start of vaccine era | 43% annually, 12–15 y |
| Sweden | Herjweijer 2016 [A18] | National hospital admissions that included genital warts diagnosis code, within 4 y after start of vaccine era | 82%, 10–16 y (3 vs 0 dose) |
| United States | Flagg 2013 [A30] | Claims data (inpatient/outpatient visits or pharmacy dispensing) from large claims database (Truven Health Analytics), within 3 y after start of vaccine era | No change, 10–14 y |
More details regarding the impact and effectiveness of quadrivalent human papillomavirus vaccination on anogenital warts are provided in Supplementary Tables 4 and 5, respectively, in Supplementary Appendix II.
Reductions in genital warts occurred as early as 1 year after program implementation in Australia [A29] and Germany [A35].
Abbreviation: y, years.
Figure 3.Impact and effectiveness of quadrivalent human papillomavirus (4vHPV) vaccination on cervical cytological and histological abnormalities. In Panel B, “2 doses” indicates receipt of an incomplete 3-dose schedule and not a primary 2-dose schedule. More details of the studies shown in the panels of Figure 3 are provided at the end of Supplementary Appendix II. A, Australia: population-based analysis of percentage reduction in cervical abnormalities among vaccinated (at least 1 dose) vs contemporaneous unvaccinated screened females in Victoria [A46, A44]. B, Australia: population-based analysis of percentage reduction in cervical abnormalities among vaccinated vs contemporaneous unvaccinated screened females in Queensland [A45]. C, Canada: percentage reduction in cervical abnormalities in vaccinated/vaccine era vs contemporaneous unvaccinated/prevaccine era in 3 provinces [A47, A20, A58]. D, Denmark: percentage reduction in cervical abnormalities in females vaccinated with 4vHPV vaccine (≥1 dose) vs unvaccinated women by birth cohort [A48]. E, Sweden: percentage reduction in CIN2+ and CIN3+ among females fully vaccinated with 4vHPV vaccine (3 doses) vs unvaccinated/partially vaccinated females, by age at first dose [A50]. F, United States: percentage reduction in HPV 16/18-related cervical abnormalities among females vaccinated with 4vHPV vaccine (at least 1 dose) vs contemporaneous unvaccinated females, by time between first dose and screening test leading to diagnosis; *null: adjusted prevalence ratio 1.02 [A49]. Abbreviations: AIS, adenocarcinoma in situ; ASCUS, atypical squamous cells of undetermined significance; CIN2/3, high-grade cervical intraepithelial neoplasia; LSIL, low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion.