Population-level herd protection of males from a female human papillomavirus vaccination program: Evidence from australian serosurveillance

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Abstract

Background. Australia instituted funded female human papillomavirus (HPV) immunization in 2007, followed by a targeted male vaccination program in 2013. To date, Australia is one of only several countries with a funded male HPV immunization program. In 2012-2013, we conducted a survey of HPV seroprevalence in males to assess whether or not a herd impact of female vaccination could be observed. Methods. We conducted a cross-sectional study of de-identified residual diagnostic test serum samples from males aged 15-39 years from laboratories in 3 Australian states and calculated the proportion seropositive to HPV types 6, 11, 16, and 18. We compared type-specific results by age group against those from a baseline 2005 Australian HPV serosurvey. Results. There were decreases in proportion seropositive for every HPV type across all age groups, many statistically significant. The largest decrease was observed for HPV-11, with decreases of 8- and 9-fold for ages 20-29 and 30-39 years, respectively. Despite substantial reductions in seroprevalence, at least 9% of males were seropositive for at least 1 of the 4 HPV types. Conclusions. This is the first serosurvey confirming broad population-level impact in males from female HPV vaccination. Our research may assist policy makers considering implementing HPV vaccination programs.

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Pillsbury, A. J., Quinn, H. E., Evans, T. D., McIntyre, P. B., & Brotherton, J. M. L. (2017). Population-level herd protection of males from a female human papillomavirus vaccination program: Evidence from australian serosurveillance. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 65(5), 827–832. https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/cix436

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