Papillomavirus Research (Jun 2019)

Two-dose recommendation for Human Papillomavirus vaccine can be extended up to 18 years – updated evidence from Indian follow-up cohort study

  • Partha Basu,
  • Richard Muwonge,
  • Neerja Bhatla,
  • Bhagwan M. Nene,
  • Smita Joshi,
  • Pulikottil O. Esmy,
  • Usha Rani Reddy Poli,
  • Geeta Joshi,
  • Yogesh Verma,
  • Eric Zomawia,
  • Surendra S. Shastri,
  • Sharmila Pimple,
  • Devasena Anantharaman,
  • Priya R. Prabhu,
  • Sanjay Hingmire,
  • Catherine Sauvaget,
  • Eric Lucas,
  • Michael Pawlita,
  • Tarik Gheit,
  • Kasturi Jayant,
  • Sylla G. Malvi,
  • Maqsood Siddiqi,
  • Angelika Michel,
  • Julia Butt,
  • Subha Sankaran,
  • Thiraviam Pillai Rameshwari Ammal Kannan,
  • Rintu Varghese,
  • Uma Divate,
  • Martina Willhauck-Fleckenstein,
  • Tim Waterboer,
  • Martin Müller,
  • Peter Sehr,
  • Shachi Vashist,
  • Gauravi Mishra,
  • Radhika Jadhav,
  • Ranjit Thorat,
  • Massimo Tommasino,
  • M. Radhakrishna Pillai,
  • Rengaswamy Sankaranarayanan

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7
pp. 75 – 81

Abstract

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Earlier publication from the ongoing multi-centric study of the International Agency for Research on Cancer to evaluate less than three doses of the quadrivalent Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine in India amongst unmarried girls demonstrated non-inferior total antibody titres, neutralizing antibody titres and antibody avidity in 2-dose recipients compared to 3-dose recipients at 15–18 years of age (Bhatla et al., 2018) [7].The number of participants recruited at 15–18 years of age was 1515 and 1795 in the 3-dose and the 2-dose groups respectively. At a median follow-up of 7 years, incident HPV 16/18 infections were detected in 1.6% women receiving two doses and 0.8% women receiving three doses at 15–18 years. Frequency of incident infection was 7.0% in the age- and site-matched unvaccinated women (N = 1484). No persistent infection from HPV 16 was observed in the 2- or 3-dose recipients and one (0.2%) persistent HPV 18 infection was documented, each in the 3-dose and 2-dose cohorts. Among the unvaccinated women, the frequency of HPV 16/18 persistent infection was 1.7%.The protection offered by two doses of quadrivalent HPV vaccine against incident and persistent infections in recipients at 15–18 years is comparable to that seen in 3-dose recipients at 15–18 years. Keywords: Human papillomavirus, Quadrivalent vaccine, Two doses, Age 15–18 years, Immunogenicity, Incident infections, Persistent infections