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HPV Update Mr Jonathan Lippiatt MRCOG DFSRH MBBCh Clinical Lecturer Obstetrics & Gynaecology Cardiff University HPV Update How HPV leads to cancer Impact on UK and world Vaccination programme uptake Problems with the programme Cervical screening Prevention in developing countries Human Papillomavirus Cervical Cancer HPV Recap Small virus – 100 types Low-risk e.g. 6, 11 High-risk e.g. 16, 18 Associated with various disease from skin warts to cervical cancer Transmission via skin-to-skin/sexual Most common STI How does HPV cause cancer? HPV infection Persistent HR HPV infection Normal epithelium HPV clearance No lesion > 80% CIN 10-20+ years Invasive carcinoma HPV clearance & regression dependent on age, degree of CIN lesion & immune status Strength of Association Relative Risk Carcinogenic Agent > 500 High Risk HPV and cervical cancer - Philippines, Costa Rica, Bangkok 50-100 Hepatitis B virus and liver cancer - Taiwan, Greece 20 Hepatitis C virus and liver cancer - Italy, Spain 10 Cigarette smoking and lung cancer Worldwide stats for cervical cancer Worldwide 493,000 new cases per year 1 in 10 female cancers Commonest cancer in Sub-Saharan Africa and parts of South America Approximately 274,000 deaths per year Mortality rates vary 17 fold 2.7 million years of life lost in women aged 25-64 2 opportunities to prevent cervical cancer Prophylactic HPV vaccination Normal cervix HPV infection Cervical screening & treatment Precursor disease – Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia (CIN) Cervical cancer HPV Immunisation Programme in Wales From Sept 2008 routine 12-13yr olds catch-up for 18yr olds From Sept 2009 routine 12-13yr olds accelerated catch-up for 15-18yr olds Wales Uptake In 2008/09 school year 8 1st dose – 88.9% 2nd dose – 88.1% 3rd dose – 85.2% 18yr olds 1st dose – 46.8% 2nd dose – 40.6% 3rd dose – 27.7% UK Uptake 88.9 88.1 85.2 International Uptake Latest Wales Data (Oct-Dec 09) In 2009/10 school year 8 1st dose – 80.8% 2nd dose – 62.7% Year 10 – 77.8% and 61% Year 11 – 76% and 61.6% Year 12 – 50.2% and 38.6% Year 13 – 42.1% and 31.3% Schools vs GPs Problems? Parental rejection Prevents a STI Girls are too young? Vaccine very new Patient rejection Three injections! Arm hurts Am I bothered?!? Problems? Actually uptake results and recent study show parents are agreeable One NHS trust piloting incentives for the catch-up group Media problems? Daily Mail: First picture of girl, 14, who died after being injected with cervical cancer jab from 'rogue batch‘ Daily Mail: How safe is the cervical cancer jab? Five teenagers reveal their alarming stories Media Problems? Daily Telegraph: Cervical cancer vaccine will cut cases by two thirds, experts calculate Guardian: Cancer tests go up after Goody diagnosis Drug safety MHRA 8th Apr 2010 3.5 million doses across UK Majority are recognised S/E or due to the injection process Isolated medical conditions appear to be coincidental Top 10 reported adverse effects Dizziness 513 Headache 511 Nausea 511 Pain in extremity 409 Syncope 273 Vomiting 224 Malaise 180 Fatigue 151 Pyrexia 145 Rash Bedridden / feeling drunk / mobility decreased / disturbance in attention 118 7 Drug Safety Post hoc study of phase III trials reveal no statistically significant increase in rate of miscarriage However, it cannot be ruled out and caution is advised Missed opportunity? CervarixTM vs Gardasil® Genital warts most common STI in UK Costs NHS approx £23m/yr According to HPA the DoH are saving £18.6 m a year by using Cervarix GSK report that Cervarix induces significantly higher antibody titres - ?longer duration of protection Missed opportunity? What about the boys? Herd immunity Greater infection risk due to promiscuity At risk of penile, anal and oropharyngeal cancers Cervical Screening Still required? YES – and must be emphasised to girls Mothers may be motivated to attend Concern also that unvaccinated will become the unscreened Different in the future? Age of initial screening HPV testing to triage Cervical cancers avoidable in different countries Screening efficacy HPV Vaccine Coverage (notably in unscreened women) 85% 50% 10% 85% 95% 91% 86% 50% 82% 69% 54% Nearly perfect screening, eg Nordic countries 10% 0 Lowestresource countries 67% 44% 17% 64% 38% 8% High-resource countries Intermediate -resource countries Franceschi 2008 Coverage is vital Coverage for vaccination & screening is crucial for maximising cervical cancer prevention HPV vaccination particularly important for women unlikely to be screened eg rural populations Systematic, organised screening required Quality and sustainability important Summary Best practice for vaccine programme is still being determined Schools doing very well for 12-13yr olds Catch-up been more challenging Implications on future screening Potential for developing countries Questions? Questions?