Abstract
BackgroundThe human papillomavirus (HPV) is the most common sexually transmitted infection (STI) worldwide. Gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (GBM), and GBM living with HIV in particular, are disproportionately impacted by HPV-associated cancers. The HPV vaccine, given early enough in life, may markedly reduce the likelihood of such cancers. In Canada, most provincial insurance programs only cover HPV vaccination for GBM up to the age of 26. Our objective was to understand physicians’ everyday experiences and challenges in recommending HPV vaccination to older GBM patients.MethodsAs part of the HPV Screening and Vaccine Evaluation (HPV-SAVE) Study, we conducted semi-structured interviews with 25 HIV-positive GBM patients who had received anal cancer screening and 15 service providers, including 13 physicians, who had arranged for anal cancer screening in the Canadian provinces of Ontario and British Columbia. In this analysis, we draw upon the 13 physician interviews, which were coded following Grounded Theory.ResultsPhysicians strongly supported the HPV vaccine for all GBM and considered it to be important for the management of HIV-related care. However, the overall support for HPV vaccination among physicians did not translate into consistent recommendation practices. There were two overarching factors that limited the strength/frequency of physicians’ vaccine recommendation practices. First, cost/insurance coverage for some older patients impacted if and how the HPV vaccine was discussed. Second, physicians had diverse perspectives on both the prevention and therapeutic benefits of vaccinating older GBM and the reality that national guidelines are incongruent with publicly funded vaccine programs for vaccinating patients over 26 years old. These two interrelated factors have co-produced an apparent economic-evidentiary conundrum for many physicians regarding how and for whom to offer HPV vaccination.ConclusionEconomic barriers coupled with evidentiary and guideline gaps have created clinical practice challenges for physicians and has resulted in different messages being communicated to some older GBM patients about how important HPV vaccination is for their health.
Highlights
The human papillomavirus (HPV) is the most common sexually transmitted infection (STI) worldwide and is a cause for several types of cancers, including cervical, oral, oropharyngeal, penile, and anal cancers [1, 2]
In addition to interviews with 25 GBM-LHIV patient-participants in Toronto, Canada, who had received anal cancer screening through HPV-SAVE, we interviewed 15 health service providers in Toronto, Ottawa and Vancouver, Canada
Physicians did not express any concerns regarding the safety of the HPV vaccine; a few indicated that the HPV vaccine had a similar side-effect profile to other vaccines and that they were “pro-vaccine”
Summary
The human papillomavirus (HPV) is the most common sexually transmitted infection (STI) worldwide and is a cause for several types of cancers, including cervical, oral, oropharyngeal, penile, and anal cancers [1, 2]. Those living with HIV are at a significantly higher risk of developing HPV-associated cancers [3]. Gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (GBM) living with HIV (GBM-LHIV) are 100 times more likely to develop anal cancer than the general population [4]. Our objective was to understand physicians’ everyday experiences and challenges in recommending HPV vaccination to older GBM patients
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