HPV Prevalence in Colombian Women with Cervical Cancer: Implications for Vaccination in a Developing Country

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Abstract

Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccines have been considered potentially cost-effective for the reduction of cervical cancer burden in developing countries; their effectiveness in a public health setting continues to be researched. We conducted an HPV prevalence survey among Colombian women with invasive cancer. Paraffin-embedded biopsies were obtained from one high-risk and one low-middle-risk regions. GP5+/GP6+ L1 primers, RLB assays, and E7 type specific PCR were used for HPV-DNA detection. 217 cases were analyzed with 97.7 HPV detection rate. HPV-16/18 prevalence was 63.1; HPV-18 had lower occurrence in the high-risk population (13.8 versus 9.6) allowing for the participation of less common HPV types; HPV-45 was present mainly in women under 50 and age-specific HPV type prevalence revealed significant differences. Multiple high-risk infections appeared in 16.6 of cases and represent a chance of replacement. Age-specific HPV prevalence and multiple high-risk infections might influence vaccine impact. Both factors highlight the role of HPVs other than 16/18, which should be considered in cost-effectiveness analyses for potential vaccine impact. Copyright © 2009.

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APA

Murillo, R., Molano, M., Martínez, G., Mejía, J. C., & Gamboa, O. (2009). HPV Prevalence in Colombian Women with Cervical Cancer: Implications for Vaccination in a Developing Country. Infectious Diseases in Obstetrics and Gynecology, 2009. https://doi.org/10.1155/2009/653598

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