Background
Human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination programs achieve substantial population-level impact, with effects extending beyond protection of vaccinated individuals. We assessed trends in HPV prevalence up to eight years post-vaccination among men and women in the Netherlands, where bivalent HPV (2vHPV) vaccination, targeting HPV16/18, has been offered to (pre)adolescent girls since 2009 with moderate vaccination coverage.
Methods
We used data from the PASSYON study, a survey initiated in 2009 (pre-vaccination) and repeated biennially among 16-24 year-old visitors of sexual health centers. We studied genital HPV positivity from 2009-2017 among women, heterosexual men, and unvaccinated women using Poisson GEE models, adjusted for individual- and population-level confounders. Trends were studied for 25 HPV types detected by the SPF10-LiPA25 platform.
Results
6,354 women (64.7% self-reported unvaccinated) and 2,414 heterosexual men were included. Percentual declines in vaccine types HPV16/18 were observed for all women (12.6% per year (py); 95% confidence interval (CI) 10.6-14.5%), heterosexual men (13.0% py; 95% CI 8.3-17.5%), and unvaccinated women (5.4% py; 95% CI 2.9-7.8%). We observed significant declines in HPV31 (all women and heterosexual men), HPV45 (all women), and in all high-risk HPV types pooled (all women and heterosexual men). Significant increases were observed for HPV56 (all women) and HPV52 (unvaccinated women).
Conclusion
Our results provide evidence for first-order herd effects among heterosexual men against HPV16/18 and cross-protective types. Additionally, we show second-order herd effects against vaccine types among unvaccinated women. These results are promising regarding population-level and clinical impact of girls-only 2vHPV vaccination in a country with moderate vaccine uptake.