Abstract

The Costa Rica Vaccine Trial (CVT), a phase III randomized clinical trial, provided the initial data that one dose of the HPV vaccine could provide durable protection against HPV infection. Although the study design was to administer all participants three doses of HPV or control vaccine, 20% of women did not receive the three-dose regimens, mostly due to involuntary reasons unrelated to vaccination. In 2011, we reported that a single dose of the bivalent HPV vaccine could be as efficacious as three doses of the vaccine using the endpoint of persistent HPV infection accumulated over the first four years of the trial; findings independently confirmed in the GSK-sponsored PATRICIA trial. Antibody levels after one dose, although lower than levels elicited by three doses, were 9-times higher than levels elicited by natural infection. Importantly, levels remained essentially constant over at least seven years, suggesting that the observed protection provided by a single dose might be durable. Much work has been done to assure these non-randomized findings are valid. Yet, the group of recipients who received one dose of the bivalent HPV vaccine in the CVT and PATRICIA trials was small and not randomly selected nor blinded to the number of doses received. The next phase of research is to conduct a formal randomized, controlled trial to evaluate the protection afforded by a single dose of HPV vaccine. Complementary studies are in progress to bridge our findings to other populations, and to further document the long-term durability of antibody response following a single dose.

Highlights

  • Cervical cancer affects more than half a million women annually, with 88% of mortality occurring in low-income nations, where cervical cancer is the third leading cause of cancer mortality in women [1]

  • Data generated from Costa Rica Vaccine Trial (CVT) and other sources on single-dose human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine protection are being used to make decisions about future studies

  • A concern is that one-dose protection is not a function of the HPV vaccine, but instead related to an underlying characteristic shared by women who received only one dose

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Summary

Introduction

Cervical cancer affects more than half a million women annually, with 88% of mortality occurring in low-income nations, where cervical cancer is the third leading cause of cancer mortality in women [1]. ⇑ Corresponding author at: Infections & Immunoepidemiology Branch, Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, NCI, 9609 Medical Center Drive, RM 6-E104, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA. Vaccinating girls aged 9–13 years against human papillomavirus (HPV) and screening women aged 30–49 years for cervical cancer were named as some of the most cost-effective and feasible for implementation [3]. HPV vaccines were licensed and recommended a decade ago [4], in order to reduce individual- and population-prevalence of HPV, a necessary cause of cervical carcinogenesis [5]. These vaccines were initially tested and approved in three-dose regimens [4].

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