Moffitt Cancer Center, 12902 Magnolia Drive, Tampa, FL 33612, USA; University of Chicago, 5801 S. Ellis Ave., Chicago, IL 60637, USA.
Moffitt Cancer Center, 12902 Magnolia Drive, Tampa, FL 33612, USA.
Vaccine. 2024 Sep 17;42(22):125995. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2024.05.043. Epub 2024 May 27.
Our goal was to provide an overview of uptake rates across vaccine types and factors associated with vaccine uptake among cancer survivor populations.
A literature search was conducted using Ovid MEDLINE® ALL (Wolters Kluwer), Embase (Elsevier) and CINAHL Complete (EBSCO) databases and according to PRISMA guidelines. Eligible articles were limited to those examining vaccination uptake among cancer survivors who had completed treatment, reported factors associated with uptake (e.g., barriers and facilitators), and published in English between 2011 and 2021. Two independent reviewers screened citations for inclusion and two performed data abstraction, verified by an arbiter.
The search returned 4,215 total articles, and 271 duplicates were removed. During abstract/title screening, 212 articles were identified. Following full-text screening, 47 articles/abstracts were found to meet inclusion criteria, 16 articles/abstracts were removed, and 31 studies were included in the review. Among the 31 studies, participant age ranged from 9 years to adults of all ages. Vaccine types included: influenza (n = 18), human papillomavirus (n = 10), pneumococcal (n = 8), hepatitis A/B (n = 1), shingles (n = 1), measles (n = 1), tetanus/diphtheria (n = 1), and haemophilus influenza B (n = 1). Vaccine uptake varied greatly across studies, vaccine types, and participant populations. Factors affecting vaccination uptake included sociodemographic variables and social determinants of health, health beliefs/attitudes/knowledge, provider recommendation, and cancer treatment/clinical variables.
Our findings highlight the need for further examining factors associated with vaccine uptake, the need for clinical guidelines that specifically address vaccination among cancer survivors, and potential targets for multi-level interventions to improve vaccination rates among cancer survivor populations.
我们的目标是提供一个关于不同疫苗类型的接种率概述,并介绍癌症幸存者人群中与疫苗接种相关的因素。
根据 PRISMA 指南,我们在 Ovid MEDLINE® ALL(Wolters Kluwer)、Embase(Elsevier)和 CINAHL Complete(EBSCO)数据库中进行了文献检索。合格的文章仅限于那些检查已完成治疗的癌症幸存者的疫苗接种率、报告与接种相关的因素(如障碍和促进因素)并在 2011 年至 2021 年期间以英文发表的文章。两名独立的评审员筛选纳入的引文,两名评审员进行数据提取,由仲裁人进行验证。
搜索共返回 4215 篇文章,排除了 271 篇重复文章。在摘要/标题筛选过程中,确定了 212 篇文章。经过全文筛选,发现 47 篇文章/摘要符合纳入标准,16 篇文章/摘要被排除,31 项研究被纳入综述。在 31 项研究中,参与者年龄从 9 岁到所有年龄段的成年人不等。疫苗类型包括:流感(n=18)、人乳头瘤病毒(n=10)、肺炎球菌(n=8)、甲型肝炎/乙型肝炎(n=1)、带状疱疹(n=1)、麻疹(n=1)、破伤风/白喉(n=1)和流感嗜血杆菌 B(n=1)。不同研究、疫苗类型和参与者人群的疫苗接种率差异很大。影响疫苗接种的因素包括社会人口统计学变量和健康的社会决定因素、健康信念/态度/知识、提供者建议以及癌症治疗/临床变量。
我们的研究结果强调了进一步研究与疫苗接种相关的因素、制定专门针对癌症幸存者接种疫苗的临床指南以及确定提高癌症幸存者人群疫苗接种率的多层次干预措施潜在目标的必要性。