Abstract

Although human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccines were initially licensed based on efficacy after three-dose regimens in women aged 15–26 years, it was recognized early in clinical development that comparable immunogenicity could be obtained after just two doses when administered to younger girls. In both Canada and Mexico, public health authorities made the decision to administer two doses 6 months apart with a planned additional dose at 60 months, while simultaneously doing further study to determine if the third dose would confer meaningful additional benefit. This delayed third dose approach permitted a more cost-effective program with opportunities for improved compliance while minimizing injections and leaving open the opportunity to provide a full three-dose vaccination series. It required close cooperation across many governmental and civil society leadership bodies and real-time access to emerging data on HPV vaccine effectiveness.Although still limited, there is increasing evidence that even one-dose vaccination is sufficient to provide prolonged protection against HPV infection and associated diseases. Ongoing clinical trials and ecological studies are expected to consolidate existing data regarding one dose schedule use. However, to accelerate the preventive effect of HPV vaccination some jurisdictions, in particular those with limited resources may already consider the initiation of a one dose vaccination with the possibility of giving the second dose later in life if judged necessary. Such an approach would facilitate vaccination implementation and might permit larger catch-up vaccination programs in older girls (or as appropriate, girls and boys), thereby accelerating the impact on cervical cancer and other HPV-associated diseases.

Highlights

  • Two main factors dictate the success of a vaccination program: vaccine effectiveness and vaccine uptake

  • Vaccine uptake remains suboptimal with less than half of countries (82 of 195) implementing human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination programs [6,7]. This situation is due to several factors including high vaccine prices, operational difficulties of multi-dose vaccination schedules, targeted age groups outside of infant and early childhood routine schedules, anti-vaccination concerns specific to HPV vaccines including its association to sexual activity, and ignorance about the relevance of precancerous clinical endpoints assessed in clinical trials

  • The ambitious, but carefully planned and evaluated two-dose HPV vaccination schedule became a standard used in many countries, and further data, limited, suggest that one-dose schedules might be sufficient

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Summary

Introduction

Two main factors dictate the success of a vaccination program: vaccine effectiveness and vaccine uptake. A decade of experience with HPV vaccines has shown they are safe and effective, with the potential to prevent the majority of HPV-related diseases [1,2,3,4,5] Despite these important characteristics, vaccine uptake remains suboptimal with less than half of countries (82 of 195) implementing HPV vaccination programs [6,7]. Vaccine uptake remains suboptimal with less than half of countries (82 of 195) implementing HPV vaccination programs [6,7] This situation is due to several factors including high vaccine prices, operational difficulties of multi-dose vaccination schedules, targeted age groups outside of infant and early childhood routine schedules, anti-vaccination concerns specific to HPV vaccines including its association to sexual activity, and ignorance about the relevance of precancerous clinical endpoints assessed in clinical trials. In many countries the main barriers are related to operational and financial difficulties, including the multi-dose vaccination schedule [8,9]

Vaccination schedules
The Canadian context
The Quebec approach
The global transition to two-doses HPV schedules in girls
Importance of evaluation and monitoring
The Mexican context
The Mexican experience
Further questions over one-dose HPV vaccination
Findings
Summary
Full Text
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