Eradication of human papillomavirus and elimination of HPV-related diseases - scientific basis for global public health policies
- PMID: 30657348
- DOI: 10.1080/14760584.2019.1568876
Eradication of human papillomavirus and elimination of HPV-related diseases - scientific basis for global public health policies
Abstract
Introduction: Infections with oncogenic human papillomaviruses (HPV) globally cause about 9% of cancers in females and 1% of cancers in males. HPV disease burden can be effectively controlled by prophylactic HPV-vaccination provided it has high impact.
Areas covered: A unique series of biobank-based and health registry-based studies that exploit randomized intervention cohorts has provided data on population-level safety of HPV vaccination, duration of vaccine-induced protection and impact of gender-neutral HPV vaccination, providing a scientific basis for policies to eradicate oncogenic HPV types and associated diseases worldwide.
Expert commentary: The ultimate goal of HPV vaccination is the eradication of high-risk (hr) HPVs. Seventy-five percent coverage gender-neutral vaccination of early adolescents will rapidly eradicate also HPV16 from the general population.
Keywords: Cancer; eradication; gender-neutral vaccination; herd effect; human papillomavirus; impact; resilience; safety; vaccine efficacy.
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