Kawana Kei, Adachi Katsuyuki, Kojima Satoko, Kozuma Shiro, Fujii Tomoyuki
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Tokyo, 7-3-1 Hongo, Bunkyoku, Tokyo 113-8655, Japan.
Open Virol J. 2012;6:264-9. doi: 10.2174/1874357901206010264. Epub 2012 Dec 28.
Cervical cancer is the second largest cause of cancer-related death in women worldwide, and it occurs following persistent infection, sometimes for decades, with a specific subset of human papillomavirus (HPV) types; the approximately 13 oncogenic subtypes. Prophylactic vaccines against HPV infections hold promise for cost-effective reductions in the incidence of cervical cancer, but this may not be enough. Two prophylactic HPV vaccines are presently available and both contain L1 virus-like particles (VLPs) derived from the HPV subtypes most frequently associated with cervical cancer, HPV-16 and -18. Since the L1-VLP vaccines can only effectively prevent infection by the specific HPV subtype against which the vaccine was developed, cervical cancers caused by high-risk HPV subtypes other than HPV-16 and -18 may still occur in recipients of the current HPV vaccines. Furthermore, HPV vaccination coverage for adolescents is insufficient in most countries and therefore even HPV-16 and -18 infections are unlikely to be fully eradicated using the existing strategies. The development of HPV therapeutic vaccines remains essential. Many therapeutic vaccines aimed at clearing HPV-related cervical lesions have been developed and tested in patients with HPV16-positive cervical intraepithelial lesions (CIN) or cervical cancers. To date, definitive clinical efficacy and appropriate immunological responses have never been demonstrated for cervical neoplasia although promising results have been reported in patients with vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia. Here we discuss shortcomings of previous HPV therapeutic vaccine candidates and propose a novel vaccination strategy that leverages newly gained knowledge about mucosal immunity and the induction of mucosal immune responses.
宫颈癌是全球女性癌症相关死亡的第二大原因,它是在持续感染特定亚型的人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)后发生的,这种感染有时会持续数十年;大约有13种致癌亚型。预防性HPV疫苗有望以具有成本效益的方式降低宫颈癌的发病率,但这可能还不够。目前有两种预防性HPV疫苗,它们都含有源自与宫颈癌最常相关的HPV亚型HPV-16和-18的L1病毒样颗粒(VLP)。由于L1-VLP疫苗只能有效预防针对其开发的特定HPV亚型的感染,因此在当前HPV疫苗的接种者中,仍可能发生由HPV-16和-18以外的高危HPV亚型引起的宫颈癌。此外,在大多数国家,青少年的HPV疫苗接种覆盖率不足,因此即使采用现有策略,HPV-16和-18感染也不太可能被完全根除。HPV治疗性疫苗的研发仍然至关重要。许多旨在清除HPV相关宫颈病变的治疗性疫苗已被研发出来,并在HPV16阳性宫颈上皮内瘤变(CIN)或宫颈癌患者中进行了测试。迄今为止,尽管在外阴上皮内瘤变患者中已报道了有前景的结果,但对于宫颈肿瘤,尚未证实其确切的临床疗效和适当的免疫反应。在此,我们讨论了先前HPV治疗性候选疫苗的缺点,并提出了一种新的疫苗接种策略,该策略利用了新获得的关于黏膜免疫和黏膜免疫反应诱导的知识。