Upper age limits for US male human papillomavirus vaccination for oropharyngeal cancer prevention: a microsimulation-based modeling study

Author:

Landy Rebecca1ORCID,Haber Gregory2,Graubard Barry I1,Campos Nicole G3,Sy Stephen3,Kim Jane J3,Burger Emily A34ORCID,Cheung Li C1,Katki Hormuzd A1ORCID,Gillison Maura L5,Chaturvedi Anil K1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute , Rockville, MD, USA

2. Information Technology Laboratory, National Institute of Standards and Technology , Gaithersburg, MD, USA

3. Center for Health Decision Science, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health , Boston, MA, USA

4. Department of Health Management and Health Economics, University of Oslo , Norway

5. Division of Cancer Medicine, MD Anderson Cancer Center , Houston, TX, USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundHuman papillomavirus (HVP)–positive oropharyngeal cancer is the most common HPV-associated cancer in the United States. The age at acquisition of oral HPV infections that cause oropharyngeal cancer (causal infections) is unknown; consequently, the benefit of vaccination of US men aged 27-45 years remains uncertain.MethodsWe developed a microsimulation-based, individual-level, state-transition model of oral HPV16 and HPV16-positive oropharyngeal cancer among heterosexual US men aged 15-84 years, calibrated to population-level data. We estimated the benefit of vaccination of men aged 27-45 years for prevention of oropharyngeal cancer, accounting for direct- and indirect effects (ie, herd effects) of male and female vaccination.ResultsIn the absence of vaccination, most (70%) causal oral HPV16 infections are acquired by age 26 years, and 29% are acquired between ages 27 and 45 years. Among men aged 15-45 years in 2021 (1976-2006 birth cohorts), status quo vaccination of men through age 26 years is estimated to prevent 95% of 153 450 vaccine-preventable cancers. Assuming 100% vaccination in 2021, extending the upper age limit to 30, 35, 40, or 45 years for men aged 27-45 years (1976-1994 cohorts) is estimated to yield small benefits (3.0%, 4.2%, 5.1%, and 5.6% additional cancers prevented, respectively). Importantly, status quo vaccination of men through age 26 years is predicted to result in notable declines in HPV16-positive oropharyngeal cancer incidence in young men by 2035 (51% and 24% declines at ages 40-44 years and 45-49 years, respectively) and noticeable declines (12%) overall by 2045.ConclusionMost causal oral HPV16 infections in US men are acquired by age 26 years, underscoring limited benefit from vaccination of men aged 27-45 years for prevention of HPV16-positive oropharyngeal cancers.

Funder

Intramural Research Program

National Cancer Institute

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

Cited by 2 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Prophylactic human papillomavirus vaccination for prevention of oropharyngeal cancer in older men: is the juice worth the squeeze?;JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute;2023-02-14

2. Human papillomavirus: What we know and what we doing?;Archives of Community Medicine and Public Health;2023-02-03

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