Department of Health Policy and Management, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina, United States of America.
Department of Public Health Sciences, Penn State College of Medicine, United States of America.
Prev Med. 2019 Jun;123:197-203. doi: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2019.03.037. Epub 2019 Mar 29.
Studies disagree about whether racial and ethnic groups have lower or higher human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination uptake, an important issue given large disparities in some HPV cancers. We sought to characterize and explain racial and ethnic differences in HPV vaccination. We systematically searched PubMed, CINAHL, Embase, and Web of Science to identify US studies through mid-2017 reporting associations of race and ethnicity with HPV vaccination. We identified 118 studies (n = 3,095,486) published in English that reported HPV vaccine initiation or follow-through in the US from which we could calculate effect sizes. We used random effects meta-analysis to synthesize effect sizes for comparisons of Whites or non-Hispanics to Blacks, Hispanics, Asians, or all minority groups combined. Studies showed no racial or ethnic differences in HPV vaccine initiation overall. However, when restricting to studies using provider-verified vaccination data, minorities were 6.1% [3.3%-8.8%] more likely than Whites to initiate HPV vaccination. Advantages were larger for Hispanics, males, and younger samples (age < 18). In contrast, minorities were 8.6% [5.6%, 11.7%], less likely than Whites to follow-through with the full HPV vaccine series, a disparity present across all participant and study characteristics. More recent studies found larger advantages for racial and ethnic minorities in HPV vaccine initiation and smaller disparities in follow-through. In summary, high-quality studies found racial and ethnic minorities are more likely to initiate but less likely to follow-through with HPV vaccination, a clear finding that self-report studies obscure. Higher HPV vaccine initiation among minorities suggests potential reductions in HPV cancer disparities.
研究结果对于不同种族和民族群体的 HPV 疫苗接种率是更高还是更低存在分歧,鉴于某些 HPV 癌症存在巨大差异,这是一个重要问题。我们旨在描述和解释 HPV 疫苗接种方面的种族和民族差异。我们系统地检索了 PubMed、CINAHL、Embase 和 Web of Science,以确定截至 2017 年年中报告种族和民族与 HPV 疫苗接种之间关联的美国研究。我们确定了 118 项研究(n=3095486),这些研究发表于英文期刊,在美国报告了 HPV 疫苗接种的起始或接种完成情况,我们可以从中计算出效应量。我们使用随机效应荟萃分析来综合比较白人或非西班牙裔人与黑人、西班牙裔人、亚洲人或所有少数族裔群体的 HPV 疫苗接种起始的效应量。总体而言,研究结果显示 HPV 疫苗接种起始方面没有种族或民族差异。然而,当限制使用经提供者验证的疫苗接种数据的研究时,少数族裔比白人更有可能开始接种 HPV 疫苗,优势比为 6.1%[3.3%-8.8%]。这种优势在西班牙裔、男性和年龄较小(<18 岁)的样本中更大。相比之下,少数族裔比白人更不可能完成整个 HPV 疫苗系列接种,这种差异存在于所有参与者和研究特征中,比例为 8.6%[5.6%,11.7%]。最近的研究发现,种族和民族少数群体在 HPV 疫苗接种起始方面的优势更大,而后续接种方面的差距更小。总之,高质量的研究发现,种族和民族少数群体更有可能开始接种 HPV 疫苗,但更不可能完成整个疫苗系列接种,这一明确的发现被自我报告的研究所掩盖。少数族裔的 HPV 疫苗接种率较高表明 HPV 癌症差异可能会缩小。