Early effect of bivalent human papillomavirus vaccination on cytology outcomes in cervical samples among young women in the Netherlands

Author:

Schurink‐van ’t Klooster Tessa M.1ORCID,Siebers Albert G.2,Hoes Joske1,van Kemenade Folkert J.3,Berkhof Johannes4,Bogaards Johannes A.14,de Melker Hester E.1

Affiliation:

1. Department National Immunisation Programme, Centre for Infectious Disease Control National Institute for Public Health and the Environment Bilthoven The Netherlands

2. PALGA Houten The Netherlands

3. Department of Pathology Erasmus Medical Centre Rotterdam The Netherlands

4. Department of Epidemiology and Data Science Amsterdam UMC, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Amsterdam The Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe first HPV‐vaccine eligible cohorts in the Netherlands will enter the cervical screening program in 2023. However, a substantial number of young women already have had a cervical sample taken before entry into the regular screening program. This study was initiated to explore early effects of HPV vaccination on detection of cytological abnormalities in cervical samples of women younger than the screening age.MethodsResults of cervical samples were obtained from the Dutch National Pathology Databank (PALGA) and were linked to the women's HPV vaccination status from the national vaccination registry (Praeventis) (N = 42,171). Occurrence of low‐grade and high‐grade squamous intraepithelial lesions or worse (LSIL and HSIL+) and high‐risk HPV positive tests (hrHPV) in the first cervical sample were compared between vaccinated and unvaccinated women by multivariable logistic regression analysis, corrected for age at cervical sampling and age of vaccination (12/13 years, ≥ = 14 years).ResultsFor fully vaccinated women (three‐ or two‐dose schedule), statistically significant reductions were seen for all outcomes compared to unvaccinated women (hrHPV: adjusted OR, 0.70, 95% CI, 0.63–0.79; LSIL: 0.70, 0.61–0.80; HSIL+: 0.39, 0.30–0.51).ConclusionsBy linking nation‐wide registries on pathology and vaccination, we show significant beneficial early effects of HPV‐vaccination on LSIL, HSIL+, CIN3/AIS/carcinoma and hrHPV detection in young women upto 24 years of age who have a cervical sample taken before entry into the cervical cancer screening program.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cancer Research,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Oncology

Reference19 articles.

1. WHO.Fact sheet: Human papillomavirus (HPV) and cervical cancer.2020Updated 11 November 2020. Available from:https://www.who.int/news‐room/fact‐sheets/detail/human‐papillomavirus‐(hpv)‐and‐cervical‐cancer

2. European Medicines Agency (EMA). Available from:https://www.ema.europa.eu/en.

3. RIVM.HPV vaccination. Accessed 3 December 2020.Available from:https://www.rivm.nl/en/hpv‐vaccination.

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