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Prophylactic quadrivalent human papillomavirus (types 6, 11, 16, and 18) L1 virus-like particle vaccine in young women: a randomised double-blind placebo-controlled multicentre phase II efficacy trial
Authors:Villa Luisa L  Costa Ronaldo L R  Petta Carlos A  Andrade Rosires P  Ault Kevin A  Giuliano Anna R  Wheeler Cosette M  Koutsky Laura A  Malm Christian  Lehtinen Matti  Skjeldestad Finn Egil  Olsson Sven-Eric  Steinwall Margareta  Brown Darron R  Kurman Robert J  Ronnett Brigitte M  Stoler Mark H  Ferenczy Alex  Harper Diane M  Tamms Gretchen M  Yu Jimmy  Lupinacci Lisa  Railkar Radha  Taddeo Frank J  Jansen Kathrin U  Esser Mark T  Sings Heather L  Saah Alfred J  Barr Eliav
Affiliation:Department of Virology, Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, Sao Paulo, Brazil. llvilla@ludwig.org.br
Abstract:BACKGROUND: A randomised double-blind placebo-controlled phase II study was done to assess the efficacy of a prophylactic quadrivalent vaccine targeting the human papillomavirus (HPV) types associated with 70% of cervical cancers (types 16 and 18) and with 90% of genital warts (types 6 and 11). METHODS: 277 young women (mean age 20.2 years [SD 1.7]) were randomly assigned to quadrivalent HPV (20 microg type 6, 40 microg type 11, 40 microg type 16, and 20 microg type 18) L1 virus-like-particle (VLP) vaccine and 275 (mean age 20.0 years [1.7]) to one of two placebo preparations at day 1, month 2, and month 6. For 36 months, participants underwent regular gynaecological examinations, cervicovaginal sampling for HPV DNA, testing for serum antibodies to HPV, and Pap testing. The primary endpoint was the combined incidence of infection with HPV 6, 11, 16, or 18, or cervical or external genital disease (ie, persistent HPV infection, HPV detection at the last recorded visit, cervical intraepithelial neoplasia, cervical cancer, or external genital lesions caused by the HPV types in the vaccine). Main analyses were done per protocol. FINDINGS: Combined incidence of persistent infection or disease with HPV 6, 11, 16, or 18 fell by 90% (95% CI 71-97, p<0.0001) in those assigned vaccine compared with those assigned placebo. INTERPRETATION: A vaccine targeting HPV types 6, 11, 16, 18 could substantially reduce the acquisition of infection and clinical disease caused by common HPV types.
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