| Literature DB >> 30115065 |
Horace C W Choi1,2,3, Mark Jit1,4,5, Gabriel M Leung1, Kwok-Leung Tsui2, Joseph T Wu6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although routine vaccination of females before sexual debut against human papillomavirus (HPV) has been found to be cost-effective around the world, its cost-benefit has rarely been examined. We evaluate both the cost-effectiveness and cost-benefit of routine female adolescent nonavalent HPV vaccination in Hong Kong to guide its policy, and by extension that of mainland China, on HPV vaccination. One major obstacle is the lack of data on assortativity of sexual mixing. Such difficulty could be overcome by inferring sexual mixing parameters from HPV epidemiologic data.Entities:
Keywords: Cervical cancer; Cost-benefit analysis; Cost-effectiveness analysis; Hong Kong; Human papillomavirus; Mathematical model; Sexual mixing; Vaccination
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30115065 PMCID: PMC6097427 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-018-1118-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Fig. 1Comparison of the empirical data and the fitted model. a Age-specific HPV prevalence. b Age-specific incidence of cervical cancer. c Distribution of HPV types in cervical cancer lesions. d–f Cumulative proportions of disease progression and clearance within 2 years for HPV infections without lesions, CIN1 and CIN2. Error bars indicate the 95% credible intervals for the fitted model and 95% confidence intervals for the data
Fig. 2Key parameter estimates in the fitted model. Circles and vertical lines indicate posterior medians and 95% credible intervals. a Baseline probability of HPV transmission per sexual partnership. b Mean duration of natural immunity (on log-scale). c Age-specific susceptibility and infectiousness. The line and shades indicate medians and 95% credible intervals. d ε and ε for assortativity of sexual mixing. e Joint posterior distribution of ε and σ. Higher values of ε and smaller values of σ mean higher degree of age assortativity. Darker color indicates higher density. See Additional file 1: Table S2 for all inferred parameter values
Fig. 3Epidemiologic impact of routine female adolescent HPV vaccination. The curves and shades indicate the medians and 95% central ranges of the outcomes across all 100 probabilistic sensitivity analysis scenarios on natural history parameters, respectively. a Age-standardized HPV prevalence over time. b Age-standardized HPV prevalence after 100 years of routine vaccination as a function of vaccine uptake. c Age-standardized incidence of cervical cancer over time
Fig. 4Comparative threshold vaccine cost between cost-benefit analysis and cost-effectiveness analysis. The curves and shades indicate the medians and 95% central ranges of the outcomes, respectively, across all 10,000 probabilistic sensitivity analysis combinations of natural history and health economic parameter values. The outcomes at 25%, 50%, and 75% vaccine uptake are used to estimate the outcomes at other vaccine uptake levels using linear interpolation. a Threshold vaccine cost, i.e., the maximum cost for vaccination at which routine vaccination of girls at age 12 is cost-beneficial (TVC) and cost-effective (TVC) compared to status quo vaccine uptake (12%) at the current market price (US$284 for the two-dose schedule). b The willingness-to-pay threshold at which TVC = TVC. The GDP per capita in Hong Kong is US$40,099