US assessment of HPV types in cancers: implications for current and 9-valent HPV vaccines

M Saraiya, ER Unger, TD Thompson… - Journal of the …, 2015 - academic.oup.com
M Saraiya, ER Unger, TD Thompson, CF Lynch, BY Hernandez, CW Lyu, M Steinau…
Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 2015academic.oup.com
Background: This study sought to determine the prevaccine type-specific prevalence of
human papillomavirus (HPV)–associated cancers in the United States to evaluate the
potential impact of the HPV types in the current and newly approved 9-valent HPV vaccines.
Methods: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention partnered with seven US
population-based cancer registries to obtain archival tissue for cancers diagnosed from
1993 to 2005. HPV testing was performed on 2670 case patients that were fairly …
Background
This study sought to determine the prevaccine type-specific prevalence of human papillomavirus (HPV)–associated cancers in the United States to evaluate the potential impact of the HPV types in the current and newly approved 9-valent HPV vaccines.
Methods
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention partnered with seven US population-based cancer registries to obtain archival tissue for cancers diagnosed from 1993 to 2005. HPV testing was performed on 2670 case patients that were fairly representative of all participating cancer registry cases by age and sex. Demographic and clinical data were evaluated by anatomic site and HPV status. Current US cancer registry data and the detection of HPV types were used to estimate the number of cancers potentially preventable through vaccination.
Results
HPV DNA was detected in 90.6% of cervical, 91.1% of anal, 75.0% of vaginal, 70.1% of oropharyngeal, 68.8% of vulvar, 63.3% of penile, 32.0% of oral cavity, and 20.9% of laryngeal cancers, as well as in 98.8% of cervical cancer in situ (CCIS). A vaccine targeting HPV 16/18 potentially prevents the majority of invasive cervical (66.2%), anal (79.4%), oropharyngeal (60.2%), and vaginal (55.1%) cancers, as well as many penile (47.9%), vulvar (48.6%) cancers: 24 858 cases annually. The 9-valent vaccine also targeting HPV 31/33/45/52/58 may prevent an additional 4.2% to 18.3% of cancers: 3944 cases annually. For most cancers, younger age at diagnosis was associated with higher HPV 16/18 prevalence. With the exception of oropharyngeal cancers and CCIS, HPV 16/18 prevalence was similar across racial/ethnic groups.
Conclusions
In the United States, current vaccines will reduce most HPV-associated cancers; a smaller additional reduction would be contributed by the new 9-valent vaccine.
Oxford University Press