Abstract
We used transmission-dynamic modeling to estimate the added effectiveness of vaccinating multiple cohorts of females (12-26 years) in Australia compared with the theoretical introduction of routine-only (12-13 years) vaccination. Our results suggest that vaccinating multiple cohorts produced markedly faster direct/herd effects, and it added benefts that last for 20-70 years. Furthermore, the number needed to vaccinate to prevent 1 anogential warts (AGW) case or cervical cancer (CC) was similar for routine + catch-up (AGW = 9.9, CC = 678) and routine-only vaccination (AGW = 9.9, CC = 677), thus providing similar levels of efciency per person vaccinated.
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Drolet, M., Laprise, J. F., Brotherton, J. M. L., Donovan, B., Fairley, C. K., Ali, H., … Brisson, M. (2017). Te impact of human papillomavirus catch-up vaccination in Australia: Implications for introduction of multiple age cohort vaccination and postvaccination data interpretation. In Journal of Infectious Diseases (Vol. 216, pp. 1205–1209). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jix476
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