Monitoring vaccine and non-vaccine HPV type prevalence in the post-vaccination era in women living in the Basilicata region, Italy

Francesca Carozzi(Istituto per lo Studio e la Prevenzione Oncologica), Donella Puliti(Istituto per lo Studio e la Prevenzione Oncologica), Cristina Ocello(Istituto per lo Studio e la Prevenzione Oncologica), Pasquale Silvio Anastasio(Ospedale Madonna Delle Grazie), Espedito Antonio Moliterni(ASL Roma), Emilia Perinetti(Sanofi (Italy)), Laurence Serradell(Sanofi (France)), Elena Burroni(Istituto per lo Studio e la Prevenzione Oncologica), Massimo Confortini(Istituto per lo Studio e la Prevenzione Oncologica), Paola Mantellini(Istituto per lo Studio e la Prevenzione Oncologica), Marco Zappa(Istituto per lo Studio e la Prevenzione Oncologica), Géraldine Dominiak-Felden(Sanofi (France))
BMC Infectious Diseases
January 15, 2018
Cited by 44Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: A large free-of-charge quadrivalent HPV (qHPV) vaccination program, covering four cohorts annually (women 11, 14, 17 and 24 years), has been implemented in Basilicata since 2007. This study evaluated vaccine and non-vaccine HPV prevalence 5-7 years post-vaccination program implementation in vaccinated and unvaccinated women. METHODS: This population-based, cross-sectional study was conducted in the public screening centers of the Local Health Unit in Matera between 2012 and 2014. Cervical samples were obtained for Pap and HPV testing (HC2, LiPA Extra® assay) and participants completed a sociodemographic and behavioral questionnaire. Detailed HPV vaccination status was retrieved from the official HPV vaccine registry. HPV prevalence was described overall, by type and vaccination status. The association between HPV type-detection and risk/protective factors was studied. Direct vaccine protection (qHPV vaccine effectiveness [VE]), cross-protection, and type-replacement were evaluated in cohorts eligible for vaccination, by analyzing HPV prevalence of vaccine and non-vaccine types according to vaccination status. RESULTS: Overall, 2793 women (18-50 years) were included, 1314 of them having been in birth cohorts eligible for the HPV vaccination program (18- to 30-year-old women at enrolment). Among the latter, qHPV vaccine uptake was 59% (at least one dose), with 94% completing the schedule; standardized qHPV type prevalence was 0.6% in vaccinated versus 5.5% in unvaccinated women (P <0.001); adjusted VE against vaccine type infections was 90% (95% CI: 73%-96%) for all fully vaccinated women and 100% (95% CI not calculable) in women vaccinated before sexual debut. No statistically significant difference in overall high-risk HPV, high-risk non-vaccine HPV, or any single non-vaccine type prevalence was observed between vaccinated and unvaccinated women. CONCLUSIONS: These results, conducted in a post-vaccine era, suggest a high qHPV VE and that a well-implemented catch-up vaccination program may be efficient in reducing vaccine-type infections in a real-world setting. No cross-protective effect or evidence of type-replacement was observed a few years after HPV vaccine introduction.


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