Faculty of Infectious and Tropical Diseases, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom; Mwanza Intervention Trials Unit, National Institute of Medical Research, Mwanza, Tanzania.
Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom.
Vaccine. 2020 Feb 5;38(6):1302-1314. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2019.12.017. Epub 2019 Dec 20.
This study aimed to systematically review the literature on the efficacy and immunogenicity of single-dose HPV vaccination compared to no vaccination or multi-dose schedules among vaccine trial participants.
Medline, EMBASE, Global Health Database and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials were searched for publications and conference abstracts (dated January 1999-August 2018) using MeSH and non-MeSH terms for human papillomavirus AND vaccines AND (immunogenicity OR efficacy/effectiveness) AND dosage. Search results were screened against pre-specified eligibility criteria. Data were extracted from included articles, and a narrative synthesis conducted on efficacy against HPV16/18 infection and humoral immunogenicity.
Seven of 6,523 unique records identified were included in the review. Six were nested observational studies of participants randomised to receive two or three doses in three large HPV vaccine trials, in which some participants did not complete their allocated schedules. One small pilot study prospectively allocated participants to receive one or no vaccine dose. Frequency of HPV16/18 infection was low (e.g. <1% for 12-month-persistent infection) in all vaccinated participants up to seven years post vaccination and did not significantly differ by number of doses (p > 0.05 in all cases). Frequency of infection was significantly lower in one-dose recipients compared to unvaccinated controls (p < 0.01 for all infection endpoints in each study). HPV16/18 seropositivity rates were high in all HPV vaccine recipients (100% in three of four studies reporting this endpoint), though antibody levels were lower with one compared to two or three doses.
This review supports the premise that one HPV vaccine dose may be as effective in preventing HPV infection as multi-dose schedules in healthy young women. However, it also highlights the paucity of available evidence from purpose-designed, prospectively-randomised trials. Results from ongoing clinical trials assessing the efficacy and immunogenicity of single-dose HPV vaccination compared to currently-recommended schedules are awaited.
本研究旨在系统综述单剂 HPV 疫苗接种与未接种或多剂方案相比在疫苗试验参与者中的疗效和免疫原性的文献。
使用 MeSH 和非 MeSH 术语搜索 Medline、EMBASE、全球健康数据库和 Cochrane 对照试验中心注册库,以检索人类乳头瘤病毒和疫苗和(免疫原性或疗效/效果)和剂量的出版物和会议摘要(日期为 1999 年 1 月至 2018 年 8 月)。对搜索结果进行了预定义的合格标准筛选。从纳入的文章中提取数据,并对 HPV16/18 感染和体液免疫原性的疗效进行叙述性综合分析。
从 6523 个独特的记录中,确定了 7 个记录被纳入综述。其中 6 个是 HPV 疫苗试验中参与者随机接受两剂或三剂的嵌套观察性研究,其中一些参与者未完成他们的分配方案。一个小型前瞻性研究将参与者分配接受一剂或不接受疫苗剂量。所有接种疫苗的参与者在接种疫苗后 7 年内 HPV16/18 感染的频率均较低(例如,12 个月持续感染的频率<1%),且剂量间差异无统计学意义(所有情况下 p>0.05)。与未接种对照组相比,一剂接种者的感染频率显著降低(每个研究的所有感染终点均<0.01)。所有 HPV 疫苗接种者的 HPV16/18 血清阳性率均较高(四分之三的研究报告该终点为 100%),尽管与两剂或三剂相比,一剂的抗体水平较低。
本综述支持这样一种观点,即一剂 HPV 疫苗在预防 HPV 感染方面可能与健康年轻女性的多剂方案一样有效。然而,它也突出了缺乏来自有目的、前瞻性随机试验的可用证据。正在进行的评估单剂 HPV 疫苗接种与目前推荐方案相比的疗效和免疫原性的临床试验的结果正在等待中。