Adeyanju Gbadebo Collins, Essoh Tene-Alima, Sidibe Annick Raissa, Kyesi Furaha, Aina Muyi
Center for Empirical Research in Economics and Behavioural Science (CEREB), University of Erfurt, 99089 Erfurt, Germany.
Psychology and Infectious Disease Lab (PIDI), University of Erfurt, 99089 Erfurt, Germany.
Vaccines (Basel). 2024 May 1;12(5):489. doi: 10.3390/vaccines12050489.
Cervical cancer, caused by human papillomavirus (HPV) infection, is the second-largest cancer killer of women in low- and middle-income countries. The brunt of the global burden is borne predominantly in Sub-Saharan Africa. In 2020 alone, 70,000 of the 100,000 infected women in Africa died from it, thereby making up 21% of global cervical cancer mortality. The introduction of the HPV vaccine into the National Immunization Program was expected to change the trajectory. However, uptake of the vaccination has been poor, especially for the second dose. Only about half of the countries in Africa currently provide the vaccine. Without urgent intervention, the 2030 global cervical cancer elimination targets will be undermined. The study aims to understand the key challenges facing the HPV vaccine and to develop a roadmap to accelerate the uptake.
Fourteen countries were purposively included using a cohort design methodology and the investigation spanned March-July 2023. The Africa region was stratified into three focus-group discussion cohorts (Abidjan, Nairobi and Dar es Salaam), comprising pre-selected countries that have already and those about to introduce the HPV vaccine. In each country, the EPI manager, the NITAG chair or representatives and an HPV-focal researcher were selected participants. The methods involved a collaborative and knowledge-sharing format through regional and country-specific discussions, plenary discussions, and workshop-style group missions.
The study reached a total of 78 key stakeholders, comprising 30 participants in cohort one, 21 in cohort two and 27 in cohort three. Key outcomes included the prevalence of declining HPV2 vaccination across all countries in the region; country-specific barriers impeding uptake were identified and strategy for accelerating vaccination demand initiated, e.g., utilizing investments from COVID-19 (e.g., electronic registry and multisector coordination); individual countries developing their respective HPV vaccination recovery and acceleration roadmaps; the identification and inclusion of a zero-dose catch-up strategy into the vaccination roadmaps; support for a transition from multiple-doses to a single-dose HPV vaccine; the incorporation of implementation science research to support the decision-making process such as vaccine choices, doses and understanding behavior.
Beyond research, the study shows the significance of scientific approaches that are not limited to understanding problems, but are also solution-oriented, e.g., development of roadmaps to overcome barriers against HPV vaccination uptake.
由人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)感染引起的宫颈癌是低收入和中等收入国家女性的第二大致命癌症。全球负担主要集中在撒哈拉以南非洲地区。仅在2020年,非洲10万名感染女性中就有7万人死于宫颈癌,占全球宫颈癌死亡率的21%。将HPV疫苗纳入国家免疫规划有望改变这一趋势。然而,疫苗接种率一直很低,尤其是第二剂。目前非洲只有约一半的国家提供该疫苗。如果不进行紧急干预,2030年全球消除宫颈癌的目标将受到影响。该研究旨在了解HPV疫苗面临的关键挑战,并制定加速疫苗接种的路线图。
采用队列设计方法有目的地纳入了14个国家,调查时间为2023年3月至7月。非洲地区被分为三个焦点小组讨论队列(阿比让、内罗毕和达累斯萨拉姆),包括已经引入和即将引入HPV疫苗的预选国家。在每个国家,选择了扩大免疫规划经理、国家免疫技术咨询小组主席或代表以及一名HPV重点研究人员作为参与者。方法包括通过区域和国家特定讨论、全体讨论以及研讨会式小组任务的协作和知识共享形式。
该研究共涉及78名关键利益相关者,其中队列一有30名参与者,队列二有21名,队列三有27名。主要成果包括该地区所有国家HPV2疫苗接种率下降的情况;确定了阻碍疫苗接种的国家特定障碍,并启动了加速疫苗接种需求的战略,例如利用新冠疫情的投资(如电子登记和多部门协调);各个国家制定了各自的HPV疫苗接种恢复和加速路线图;在疫苗接种路线图中确定并纳入了零剂量补种策略;支持从多剂量HPV疫苗向单剂量疫苗的转变;纳入实施科学研究以支持决策过程,如疫苗选择、剂量和理解行为。
除了研究之外,该研究还表明了科学方法的重要性,这些方法不仅限于理解问题,还以解决问题为导向,例如制定路线图以克服HPV疫苗接种的障碍。