Burger Emily A, Lee Kyueun, Saraiya Mona, Thompson Trevor D, Chesson Harrell W, Markowitz Lauri E, Kim Jane J
Center for Health Decision Science, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, Harvard University, Boston, Massachusetts.
Department of Health Management and Health Economics, Institute of Health and Society, University of Oslo, Norway.
Cancer. 2016 Jul 1;122(13):2057-66. doi: 10.1002/cncr.30007. Epub 2016 Apr 28.
In the United States, the burden of human papillomavirus (HPV)-associated cancers varies by racial/ethnic group. HPV vaccination may provide opportunities for primary prevention of these cancers. Herein, the authors projected changes in HPV-associated cancer burden among racial/ethnic groups under various coverage assumptions with the available first-generation and second-generation HPV vaccines to evaluate changes in racial/ethnic disparities.
Cancer-specific mathematical models simulated the burden of 6 HPV-associated cancers. Model parameters, informed using national registries and epidemiological studies, reflected sex-specific, age-specific, and racial/ethnic-specific heterogeneities in HPV type distribution, cancer incidence, stage of disease at detection, and mortality. Model outcomes included the cumulative lifetime risks of developing and dying of 6 HPV-associated cancers. The level of racial/ethnic disparities was evaluated under each alternative HPV vaccine scenario using several metrics of social group disparity.
HPV vaccination is expected to reduce the risks of developing and dying of HPV-associated cancers in all racial/ethnic groups as well as reduce the absolute degree of disparities. However, alternative metrics suggested that relative disparities would persist and in some scenarios worsen. For example, when assuming high uptake with the second-generation HPV vaccine, the lifetime risk of dying of an HPV-associated cancer for males decreased by approximately 60%, yet the relative disparity increased from 3.0 to 3.9.
HPV vaccines are expected to reduce the overall burden of HPV-associated cancers for all racial/ethnic groups and to reduce the absolute disparity gap. However, even with the second-generation vaccine, relative disparities will likely still exist and may widen if the underlying causes of these disparities remain unaddressed. Cancer 2016;122:2057-66. © 2016 American Cancer Society.
在美国,人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)相关癌症的负担因种族/族裔群体而异。HPV疫苗接种可能为这些癌症的一级预防提供机会。在此,作者根据现有的第一代和第二代HPV疫苗,在不同的接种覆盖率假设下,预测了种族/族裔群体中HPV相关癌症负担的变化,以评估种族/族裔差异的变化。
特定癌症的数学模型模拟了6种HPV相关癌症的负担。使用国家登记处和流行病学研究得出的模型参数反映了HPV类型分布、癌症发病率、检测时疾病阶段和死亡率方面的性别特异性、年龄特异性和种族/族裔特异性异质性。模型结果包括6种HPV相关癌症发生和死亡的累积终生风险。在每种替代HPV疫苗接种方案下,使用几种社会群体差异指标评估种族/族裔差异程度。
预计HPV疫苗接种将降低所有种族/族裔群体中HPV相关癌症的发生和死亡风险,并降低绝对差异程度。然而,替代指标表明,相对差异将持续存在,在某些情况下还会恶化。例如,假设第二代HPV疫苗的接种率很高,男性因HPV相关癌症死亡的终生风险降低了约60%,但相对差异从3.0增加到3.9。
预计HPV疫苗将减轻所有种族/族裔群体中HPV相关癌症的总体负担,并缩小绝对差异差距。然而,即使使用第二代疫苗,如果这些差异的根本原因得不到解决,相对差异可能仍然存在并可能扩大。《癌症》2016年;122:2057 - 66。©2016美国癌症协会。