Scientific approaches toward improving cervical cancer elimination strategies

Author:

Lehtinen Matti12ORCID,Bruni Laia3,Elfström Miriam2ORCID,Gray Penelope2ORCID,Logel Margaret4,Mariz Filipe Colaço5,Baussano Iacopo6ORCID,Vänskä Simopekka7ORCID,Franco Eduardo L.4ORCID,Dillner Joakim2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Medical Faculty Tampere University Tampere Finland

2. Center of Cervical Cancer Elimination, Department of Clinical Science Intervention & Technology Karolinska Institutet Stockholm Sweden

3. Catalan Institute of Oncology Barcelona Spain

4. Division of Cancer Epidemiology McGill University Montreal Canada

5. Tumorvirus‐Specific Vaccination Strategies, German Cancer Research Center Heidelberg Germany

6. Early Detection, Prevention and Infections Branch International Agency for Research on Cancer, IARC/WHO Lyon France

7. Infectious Disease Control & Vaccinations Finnish Institute for Health & Welfare Helsinki Finland

Abstract

AbstractAt the 2023 EUROGIN workshop scientific basis for strategies to accelerate the elimination of cervical cancer and its causative agent, human papillomavirus (HPV) were reviewed. Although some countries have reached key performance indicators toward elimination (>90% of girls HPV vaccinated and >70% of women HPV screened), most are yet to reach these targets, implying a need for improved strategies. Gender‐neutral vaccination, even with moderate vaccination coverage was highlighted as a strategy to achieve elimination more rapidly. It is more resilient against major disturbances in vaccination delivery, such as what happened during the coronavirus pandemic. Further, an analysis of ethical/legal issues indicated that female‐restricted vaccination is problematic. Extended catch‐up of vaccination with concomitant screening, and outreach to vulnerable groups were highlighted. Although birth cohorts with high coverage of HPV vaccination at school are protected against HPV, and HPVs have a very low reproductive rate in women above age 35, adult women below age 30 have inadequate direct protection. In addition to herd protection from gender‐neutral vaccination, this group can be protected by offering concomitant catch‐up HPV vaccination and HPV screening. Furthermore, hepatitis B vaccination experiences indicate that elimination cannot be achieved without prioritizing vulnerable/migrant populations. The long‐lasting durability of vaccination‐induced antibody responses suggests prolonged protection with HPV vaccines when adequately administrated. Finally, cost‐effectiveness modelling suggests that high‐coverage HPV vaccination in multiple population segments will be resource‐saving due to reduced need for screening. In summary, the workshop found that strategically optimal deployment of vaccination will accelerate elimination of HPV and cervical cancer.

Funder

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals

Merck

Publisher

Wiley

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