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Impact of HPV vaccination in preventing subsequent infection and disease after excision treatment
Proposal
5521
Title of Proposed Research
Impact of HPV vaccination in preventing subsequent infection and disease after excision treatment
Lead Researcher
Fanghui Zhao
Affiliation
National Cancer Center & Cancer Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences
Funding Source
None
Potential Conflicts of Interest
Professor Zhao was CO-PI of the project GSK-107638.Shangying Hu was an investigator in charge of study coordination and data management generated in the center lab in the project GSK-107638.
Data Sharing Agreement Date
26 June 2018
Lay Summary
Bivalent human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine have been approved by CFDA in China. Bivalent vaccine is highly effective in preventing cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade II/III in women who are not infected the relevant HPV type before vaccination. However, the impacts of vaccine on the women who have previously been treated have not been fully understood.
Women who are previously treated for cervical cancers represent higher risk group for the development of subsequent cervical cancer (2 to 6-fold higher risk compared to women with normal cytology). More recently, previously results from both randomized and non-randomized studies have suggested a possible benefit of vaccination to prevent the recurrence of precursor lesions and disease after excisional treatment of prevalent disease. One study showed that rates of disease after treatment for cervical or vaginal HPV associated disease was reduced among those who were vaccine before treatment. The vaccine efficacy against recurrent HPV related disease was 46.2%. However, the impacts of HPV vaccination in preventing subsequent infection and disease after excision treatment are requesting more scientific data to support.
The clinical study GSK-107638 included Chinese women aged 18-25 years at the first time of vaccination. Cervical samples for HPV DNA testing and cervical cytology samples were collected at each study visit. Biopsy and excisional treatment specimens were analyzed by a panel of three expert gynecological pathologists. This research is based on the previous clinical study GSK-107638 which consists of participants who were randomized and vaccinated, who are treated during the follow-up period. The primary outcome is the recurrence of HPV related precursor lesions after treatment. And the secondary outcome of this study is HPV infection, persistent HPV infection (defined as positive for the detection of type-specific HPV at two or more consecutive visits after treatment), and squamous intraepithelial lesion (SIL). Besides, we also consider the outcomes related to HPV type present and absent before surgery, respectively.
This study compares these outcomes between vaccine group and placebo group, aiming at exploring the protective effect of vaccine on women who have undergone surgery for cervical disease. This reaearch will provide evidence for the impact of the vaccine on the women who are treated for cervical disease and expanding the application of vaccine in women.
Study Data Provided
[{ "PostingID": 2794, "Title": "GSK-107638", "Description": "Efficacy, immunogenicity and safety of GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals' HPV GSK 580299 vaccine in healthy Chinese female subjects" }]
Statistical Analysis Plan
In this study, we evaluate the impact from three ways including HPV infection-level analysis, squamous intraepithelial lesion (SIL) analysis and recurrent of HPV precursor lesions. In HPV infection-level analysis, we use an infection rather than a woman as the unit of analysis and analyze the incidence rate of HPV16/18 infection, HPV HPV31/33/45 infection and oncogenic HPV infection. The incidence rate of specific-type persistent HPV infection is also calculated. Given the high efficacy of the HPV-16/18 vaccine against new infections, we also conduct analysis restricted to newly detected infection after treatment. Vaccine efficacy, a measure of the percent reduction (or increase) in outcome rates observed when the vaccine arm is compared against the control arm, is computed. And corresponding 95% confidence interval (95% CI) around vaccine efficacy is estimated using PEPI software. In the squamous intraepithelial lesion (SIL) analysis, we analyze the occurrence rate of low squamous intraepithelial lesion (LSIL) and high squamous intraepithelial lesion (HSIL) stratified by specific-type after excisional procedure. Vaccine efficacy and corresponding 95% confidence interval (95%CI) are also estimated as the same method above. We intend to use Kaplan-Meier curves to compare the difference in occurrence of low squamous intraepithelial lesion (LSIL) and high squamous intraepithelial lesion (HSIL) between these two arms. Besides, we compare the difference in recurrent of HPV precursor lesions between vaccine arm and placebo arm. Moreover, the difference of antibody response is also estimated between these two arms in women who are treated. Seropositivity rates and geometric mean antibody titres (GMTs) for each antigen with 95% CI are calculated.
Publication Citation
Zhao, S., Hu, S., Xu, X. et al. Impact of HPV-16/18 AS04-adjuvanted vaccine on preventing subsequent infection and disease after excision treatment: post-hoc analysis from a randomized controlled trial. BMC Infect Dis 20, 846 (2020).
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-020-05560-z
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