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. 2022 Nov 30;18(6):2146434.
doi: 10.1080/21645515.2022.2146434. Epub 2022 Nov 20.

Why the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends initiating HPV vaccine at age 9

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Why the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends initiating HPV vaccine at age 9

Sean T O'Leary. Hum Vaccin Immunother. .

Abstract

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommends starting the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine series between 9 and 12 years, at an age that the provider deems optimal for acceptance and completion of the vaccination series. This recommendation differs from the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), which recommends HPV vaccination be initiated at age 11 or 12 years, stating the series can be started at age 9 years. This commentary discusses the reasoning behind AAP's decision to differ from ACIP, as the AAP and ACIP schedules are essentially harmonized for all other vaccines. Reasons include recognition that (1) vaccination uptake is suboptimal; (2) offering vaccination earlier offers provider's flexibility in introducing the vaccine; (3) initiating the vaccine at age 9 or 10 may be preferable for parents or adolescents who do not want to receive ≥3 concomitant vaccines at age 11 or 12; (4) earlier initiation may disentangle HPV recommendations from discussions of sexuality; (5) earlier recommendation might alleviate HPV vaccine hesitancy "fatigue;" (6) the immune response is robust at younger ages with no evidence of waning protection; and (7) there is a dearth of evidence supporting starting the recommendation at age 11 or 12 within the "adolescent immunization platform."

Keywords: AAP; ACIP; HPV; policy; vaccination; vaccine hesitancy.

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Conflict of interest statement

Dr O’Leary is the Chair of the Committee on Infectious Diseases for the American Academy of Pediatrics. He has no financial conflicts of interest. He is a co-investigator on the NIH-funded clinical trial comparing introduction of HPV vaccine at age 9 or 10 with introduction at 11 or 12 mentioned in the commentary (Kempe, Szilagyi, multi-PIs, 5R01 CA240649-03). He is also the PI of several NIH- and CDC-funded HPV-related clinical trials (1R01 CA254931-01A1, 5R21 CA230878–02, U01 IP001091).

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