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High sustained efficacy of a prophylactic quadrivalent human papillomavirus types 6/11/16/18 L1 virus-like particle vaccine through 5 years of follow-up
Authors:Villa L L  Costa R L R  Petta C A  Andrade R P  Paavonen J  Iversen O-E  Olsson S-E  Høye J  Steinwall M  Riis-Johannessen G  Andersson-Ellstrom A  Elfgren K  Krogh G von  Lehtinen M  Malm C  Tamms G M  Giacoletti K  Lupinacci L  Railkar R  Taddeo F J  Bryan J  Esser M T  Sings H L  Saah A J  Barr E
Affiliation:Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, R Prof Antonio Prudente 109, 01509-010 Sao Paulo, SP, Brazil. llvilla@ludwig.org.br
Abstract:
Human papillomavirus (HPV) causes cervical, vulvar, and vaginal cancers, precancerous dysplasia, and genital warts. We report data for the longest efficacy evaluation to date of a prophylactic HPV vaccine. In total, 552 women (16-23 years) were enrolled in a randomised, placebo-controlled study of a quadrivalent HPV 6/11/16/18 L1 virus-like-particle vaccine with vaccination at months 0, 2, and 6. At regular intervals through 3 years, subjects underwent gynaecologic examination, cervicovaginal sampling for HPV DNA, serum anti-HPV testing, and Pap testing, with follow-up biopsy as indicated. A subset of 241 subjects underwent two further years of follow-up. At 5 years post enrollment, the combined incidence of HPV 6/11/16/18-related persistent infection or disease was reduced in vaccine-recipients by 96% (two cases vaccine versus 46 placebo). There were no cases of HPV 6/11/16/18-related precancerous cervical dysplasia or genital warts in vaccine recipients, and six cases in placebo recipients (efficacy = 100%; 95% CI:12-100%). Through 5 years, vaccine-induced anti-HPV geometric mean titres remained at or above those following natural infection. In conclusion, a prophylactic quadrivalent HPV vaccine was effective through 5 years for prevention of persistent infection and disease caused by HPV 6/11/16/18. This duration supports vaccination of adolescents and young adults, which is expected to greatly reduce the burden of cervical and genital cancers, precancerous dysplasia, and genital warts.
Keywords:human papillomavirus   prophylactic vaccine   virus-like particles   cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN)   genital warts   cervical cancer   clinical trial
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