Barnabas Ruanne V, Laukkanen Päivi, Koskela Pentti, Kontula Osmo, Lehtinen Matti, Garnett Geoff P
Cancer Epidemiology Unit, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
PLoS Med. 2006 May;3(5):e138. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.0030138. Epub 2006 Apr 4.
Candidate human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccines have demonstrated almost 90%-100% efficacy in preventing persistent, type-specific HPV infection over 18 mo in clinical trials. If these vaccines go on to demonstrate prevention of precancerous lesions in phase III clinical trials, they will be licensed for public use in the near future. How these vaccines will be used in countries with national cervical cancer screening programmes is an important question.
We developed a transmission model of HPV 16 infection and progression to cervical cancer and calibrated it to Finnish HPV 16 seroprevalence over time. The model was used to estimate the transmission probability of the virus, to look at the effect of changes in patterns of sexual behaviour and smoking on age-specific trends in cancer incidence, and to explore the impact of HPV 16 vaccination. We estimated a high per-partnership transmission probability of HPV 16, of 0.6. The modelling analyses showed that changes in sexual behaviour and smoking accounted, in part, for the increase seen in cervical cancer incidence in 35- to 39-y-old women from 1990 to 1999. At both low (10% in opportunistic immunisation) and high (90% in a national immunisation programme) coverage of the adolescent population, vaccinating women and men had little benefit over vaccinating women alone. We estimate that vaccinating 90% of young women before sexual debut has the potential to decrease HPV type-specific (e.g., type 16) cervical cancer incidence by 91%. If older women are more likely to have persistent infections and progress to cancer, then vaccination with a duration of protection of less than 15 y could result in an older susceptible cohort and no decrease in cancer incidence. While vaccination has the potential to significantly reduce type-specific cancer incidence, its combination with screening further improves cancer prevention.
HPV vaccination has the potential to significantly decrease HPV type-specific cervical cancer incidence. High vaccine coverage of women alone, sustained over many decades, with a long duration of vaccine-conferred protection, would have the greatest impact on type-specific cancer incidence. This level of coverage could be achieved through national coordinated programmes, with surveillance to detect cancers caused by nonvaccine oncogenic HPV types.
在临床试验中,候选人类乳头瘤病毒(HPV)疫苗在预防持续的、特定类型的HPV感染方面已显示出近90%-100%的有效性,为期18个月以上。如果这些疫苗在III期临床试验中能够证明可预防癌前病变,那么它们将在不久的将来获得许可用于公众。在拥有国家宫颈癌筛查计划的国家中,这些疫苗将如何使用是一个重要问题。
我们建立了一个HPV 16感染及进展为宫颈癌的传播模型,并根据芬兰不同时期的HPV 16血清阳性率进行校准。该模型用于估计病毒的传播概率,观察性行为模式和吸烟的变化对特定年龄组癌症发病率趋势的影响,并探讨HPV 16疫苗接种的影响。我们估计HPV 16每次性接触的传播概率较高,为0.6。建模分析表明,性行为和吸烟的变化部分解释了1990年至1999年35至39岁女性宫颈癌发病率的上升。在青少年人群低覆盖率(机会性免疫接种为10%)和高覆盖率(国家免疫计划为90%)的情况下,对女性和男性进行疫苗接种相对于仅对女性进行疫苗接种益处不大。我们估计,在初次性行为前对90%的年轻女性进行疫苗接种有可能将特定类型HPV(如16型)宫颈癌的发病率降低91%。如果老年女性更易发生持续性感染并进展为癌症,那么接种保护期少于15年的疫苗可能会导致老年易感人群增加,且癌症发病率不会降低。虽然疫苗接种有可能显著降低特定类型癌症的发病率,但将其与筛查相结合可进一步提高癌症预防效果。
HPV疫苗接种有可能显著降低特定类型HPV宫颈癌的发病率。仅对女性进行高疫苗覆盖率接种,并持续数十年,且疫苗提供长期保护,将对特定类型癌症发病率产生最大影响。通过国家协调计划以及监测以发现由非疫苗致癌HPV类型引起的癌症,可实现这一覆盖率水平。