HPV
Vaccine Reduces Cervical Abnormalities
SUMMARY
Vaccination of young women in Australia against human papillomavirus
(HPV) lowered incidence of serious cervical cell abnormalities
and early cervical cancer by nearly 40%. |
By
Liz Highleyman
Human
papillomavirus is common among men and women worldwide. HPV
infection triggers abnormal cell growth; many types cause warts,
while high-risk types including 16 and 18 can cause cancer of
the cervix, genital-anal region, or mouth and throat.
Gardasil
(made by Merck), a quadrivalent vaccine that protects against
HPV types 6, 11, 16, and 18, was approved in the U.S. after
large clinical trials showed it reduced the risk of cervical
cancer. Initially approved for young women age 9-26 years, its
indication was later extended to young men, who are susceptible
to anal and genital cancer.
Since
people are typically infected with HPV soon after they become
sexually active, vaccination is recommended starting around
the time of puberty, but people can get a "catch up"
vaccine into their twenties. However it is not recommended for
older people who are likely to have already acquired HPV.
As described in the June
18, 2011, issue of The Lancet, Julia Brotherton from
the Victorian Cytology Service and colleagues looked at trends
in cervical abnormalities among women in Victoria, Australia,
before and after introduction of the quadrivalent HPV vaccination
program for all women age 12-26 years, starting in 2007.
The researchers analyzed data from the Victorian Cervical Cytology
Registry collected between 2003 and 2009, comparing the incidence
of high-grade and low-grade cytological cervical abnormalities
among 5 age groups during 2 periods before and after the vaccination
program began (January 2003-March 2007 and April 2007-December
2009).
High-grade abnormalities (HGAs) included cervical intraepithelial
neoplasia of grade 2 or higher and carcinoma in situ (localized);
low-grade abnormalities included milder cell changes.
Results
 |
The
incidence of high-grade abnormalities decreased by 38% among
girls younger than 18 after introduction of the vaccination
program. |
 |
The
incidence of HGAs among women under 18 fell from 0.8% during
the pre-vaccination period to 0.4% during the entire post-vaccination
period, and further to 0.2% in 2009. |
 |
The
decrease started soon after the vaccine program began. |
 |
This
decrease was progressive over time and significantly departed
from the prevailing trend of rising incidence. |
 |
No
similar significant decline in incidence of serious abnormalities
was seen for women in older age groups. |
 |
However,
incidence of abnormalities appeared to fall among women
age 18-20 starting about 1.5 years after vaccine introduction,
though this did not reach statistical significance. |
 |
No
significant decrease in incidence of LGAs was observed in
any age group. |
"This
is the first report of a decrease in incidence of HGAs within
3 years after the implementation of a population-wide HPV vaccination
programme," the study authors concluded.
They
added, "Our finding that the decrease in HGA incidence
occurred in the youngest vaccination cohort before it occurred
in the older, catch-up cohorts (who were more likely to have
been previously sexually experienced) reinforces the appropriateness
of the targeting of prophylactic HPV vaccines to pre-adolescent
girls."
Investigator
affiliation: Victorian Cytology Service Registries, Victorian
Cytology Service, East Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
7/5/11
Reference
J
Brotherton, M Fridman, CL May, et al. Early effect of the HPV
vaccination programme on cervical abnormalities in Victoria,
Australia: an ecological study. Lancet 377(9783):2085-92
(abstract).
June 18, 2011.