| Literature DB >> 30551987 |
Julia Ml Brotherton1, David Hawkes2, Farhana Sultana3, Michael J Malloy4, Dorothy A Machalek5, Megan A Smith6, Suzanne M Garland7, Marion Saville8.
Abstract
Australia's transition to primary human papillomavirus (HPV) based cervical screening, has for the first time, provided a passive mechanism for monitoring the impact of vaccination on infection prevalence among women attending screening. We assessed oncogenic HPV prevalence by single year of age in the first 7 months of the program, using data collected from a large screening laboratory in Victoria, Australia, which is routinely screening using cobas 4800, cobas 6800 and Seegene assays. Among 116,052 primary screening samples from women aged 25-74, 9.25% (95%CI: 9.09-9.42%) had oncogenic HPV detected: 2.14% (95%CI: 2.05-2.22%) were 16/18 positive and 7.12% (95%CI: 6.97-7.27%) were positive for only non-16/18 HPV. Prevalence peaked at age 25-29 then decreased with age, but this was driven by non-16/18 types. HPV16/18 prevalence remained low and flat across ages, contrasting with pre-vaccination epidemiology when HPV16/18 peaked in young women. HPV-based screening can precisely monitor HPV prevalence.Entities:
Keywords: Australia; Cervical screening; Human papillomavirus; Prevalence
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30551987 DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2018.11.075
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccine ISSN: 0264-410X Impact factor: 3.641