Tumour Virus Research (Jun 2022)

Human papillomavirus seroprevalence and seroconversion following baseline detection of nine human papillomavirus types in young women

  • Darron R. Brown,
  • Xavier Castellsagué,
  • Daron Ferris,
  • Suzanne M. Garland,
  • Warner Huh,
  • Marc Steben,
  • Cosette M. Wheeler,
  • Alfred Saah,
  • Alain Luxembourg,
  • Se Li,
  • Christine Velicer

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13
p. 200236

Abstract

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Background: Estimates of the humoral immune response to incident human papillomavirus (HPV) infections are limited. Methods: In this post hoc analysis of 3875 women aged 16–23 years from a 4-valent HPV vaccine trial (NCT00092482), HPV seroprevalence on day 1 was measured with a 9-valent HPV (HPV 6/11/16/18/31/33/45/52/58) competitive Luminex immunoassay and compared with cervical/external genital HPV detection by polymerase chain reaction. In the control group, among women who were HPV DNA‒negative on day 1, seroconversion following initial HPV detection was estimated using Kaplan-Meier methods. Results: Type-specific HPV seropositivity among women with no day 1 cervical/external genital HPV detection was 0.6%–3.6%. Women with any 9-valent HPV (9vHPV) cervical/external genital detection (796/3875; 20.5%) had concordant seropositivity ranging from 13.4% (HPV 45) to 38.5% (HPV 6). Among women in the control group who were negative for all HPV types on day 1, seroconversion by month 30 after initial detection ranged from 29% (HPV 45) to 75% (HPV 16). Conclusions: Humoral immune response to HPV is variable and dynamic, depending on type-specific exposure. This longitudinal analysis provides insight into the relationship between incident infection and seropositivity.ClinicalTrials.gov; NCT00092482 https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00092482.

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