Source:Vaccine, Volume 35, Issue 25
Author(s): Esther Navarro-Illana, Mónica López-Lacort, Pedro Navarro-Illana, Juan José Vilata, Javier Diez-Domingo
ObjectivesTo assess the effectiveness of the HPV vaccines in preventing genital warts in young women.DesignPopulation-based study using health databases.SettingValencian Community (Spain).ParticipantsAll girls and women aged 14–19years who were registered in the Valencian Community between January 2009 and December 2014 (n=279,787).Main outcome measuresIncident cases of genital warts were defined as the first activation of diagnosis code ICD-9-CM 078.11 (Condyloma acuminatum) in primary care and outpatient clinics during the study period.ResultsThere were 612 cases of genital warts. The overall incidence rate was 75.8/100,000 person-years (95% CrI 69.7–81.8). There was a decrease in genital warts when female candidates to be vaccinated with quadrivalent HPV vaccine reached the age of 18 (in 2012), compared to previous years. Incidence of genital warts in unvaccinated women and those who received the bivalent vaccine was higher than in girls and women who received the quadrivalent HPV vaccine. The effectiveness of a three-dose regimen of the quadrivalent HPV vaccine was 77% (95 CrI: 66–85%), whereas that of a single dose was 61% (95 CrI: 20–87%). No effectiveness was seen with a full vaccination course with the bivalent HPV vaccine.ConclusionsThree doses of the quadrivalent HPV vaccine were effective against genital warts in our population. Moreover, with low vaccine coverage the incidence of genital warts decreased only in the vaccinated.
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