Effectiveness of human papillomavirus vaccine against incident and persistent infections among young girls: Results from a longitudinal Dutch cohort study

2015 
Abstract Introduction Because of the long interval between infection with high-risk human papillomavirus (hrHPV) and development of cervical cancer surrogate markers for cancer incidence are necessary to monitor vaccine effectiveness (VE). The aim of this study was to calculate VE of HPV16/18 vaccination by annually assessing incident and persistent infections among (un)vaccinated girls from the general Dutch population up to 3 years after vaccination. Methods In 2009, 1668 girls (54% vaccinated) aged 14–16 years were enrolled in a prospective cohort study. Annually, questionnaire data were obtained, and a vaginal swab was tested for type-specific HPV DNA with SPF 10 -LiPA. VE was estimated by a Poisson model comparing type-specific infection rates in (un)vaccinated girls. Results The adjusted VE (95% CI) was 73% (49–86%) against incident infections with HPV16/18 and 72% (52–84%) against HPV16/18/31/45. VE against persistent HPV16/18 was 100% and 76% (−17 to 95%) against HPV16/18/31/45. This number was lower (36%) when girls who were positive for HPV16 and 18 at baseline were included in the analysis. The overall VE for hrHPV types combined was small. Although 96% of girls were HPV-naive at baseline, the cumulative 36-month incidence for any HPV was 20%, indicating high sexual activity. Discussion Vaccination is effective against incident and persistent infections with HPV16/18 and HPV16/18/31/45. Low VE against persistent HPV16/18 infection in girls positive at baseline indicates importance of vaccination before sexual debut.
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