Klosky James L, Foster Rebecca H, Hodges Jason, Peasant Courtney, Gamble Heather, McDermott Michael J, Rao Preeti
Department of Psychology, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital.
Stud Health Technol Inform. 2012;172:33-42.
Effective vaccination is now available to prevent human papillomavirus (HPV), the most common sexually transmitted infection and the cause of cervical cancer, the second most common cancer among women worldwide. HPV vaccine uptake is particularly important for females surviving cancer, who are at high risk for HPV-related complication due to the direct and indirect effects of cancer therapy. Thus, Version 3.0 of the Children's Oncology Group Long-Term Follow-Up Guidelines for Survivors of Childhood, Adolescent and Young Adult Cancer recommends HPV vaccination for all eligible females surviving childhood cancer. Because this vaccine was only FDA approved in 2006, little is known about the complexity of vaccination uptake among those surviving childhood cancer. This chapter describes HPV vaccination and its usefulness in survivors of childhood cancer, provides a rationale for describing survivors as being at increased risk for HPV-related complication, identifies factors that are predictive of HPV vaccination, and discusses the utilization of these predictors in designing strategies to promote adherence to the HPV vaccination recommendations among survivors.
目前已有有效的疫苗可预防人乳头瘤病毒(HPV),这是最常见的性传播感染,也是全球女性中第二常见癌症——宫颈癌的病因。对于癌症幸存者女性而言,HPV疫苗接种尤为重要,因为癌症治疗的直接和间接影响使她们面临HPV相关并发症的高风险。因此,儿童肿瘤学组针对儿童、青少年和青年癌症幸存者的长期随访指南第3.0版建议,所有符合条件的儿童癌症幸存女性接种HPV疫苗。由于这种疫苗在2006年才获得美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)批准,对于儿童癌症幸存者中疫苗接种的复杂性知之甚少。本章描述了HPV疫苗接种及其在儿童癌症幸存者中的作用,阐述了将幸存者视为HPV相关并发症风险增加人群的理由,确定了预测HPV疫苗接种的因素,并讨论了如何利用这些预测因素来设计策略,以促进幸存者坚持HPV疫苗接种建议。