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Vaccines for cervical cancer

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 January 2006

C. M. LOWNDES*
Affiliation:
Health Protection Agency Centre for Infections, London, UK
*
Author for correspondence: C. M. Lowndes, Ph.D., Consultant Scientist (Epidemiology), Head, STI Section, Department of HIV and Sexually Transmitted Infections, Health Protection Agency Centre for Infections, 61 Colindale Avenue, London, NW9 5EQ, UK. (Email: clowndes@uresp.ulaval.ca)
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Summary

This review focuses on current and future prevention of invasive cervical cancer (ICC), the second most common cancer among women worldwide. Implementation of population-based cytological screening programmes, using the ‘Pap’ smear to detect pre-cancerous lesions in the cervix, has resulted in substantial declines in mortality and morbidity from ICC in North America and some European countries. However, cases of, and deaths from, ICC continue to occur. Primary prevention of infection with high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) types, the central causal factor of ICC, could further reduce incidence of and mortality from ICC. This is particularly the case in developing countries, which bear 80% of the burden of ICC, and where effective Pap screening programmes are extremely difficult to implement. Very promising results from several trials of synthetic HPV type-specific monovalent (HPV 16) and bivalent (HPV 16 and 18) vaccines have recently been published, showing high efficacy against type-specific persistent HPV infection and development of type-specific pre-cancerous lesions. Large-scale phase III trials of a number of such vaccine candidates are currently underway, and there is real hope that an effective vaccine capable of protecting against infection with HPV types 16 and 18 (which together account for ∼70% of cervical cancer cases worldwide), and thereby of preventing development of a very significant proportion of cases of ICC, could be available within the next 2 years.

Type
Editorial Review
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2006

INTRODUCTION

More than 450 000 cases of invasive carcinoma of the uterine cervix are diagnosed worldwide each year, resulting in nearly a quarter of a million deaths [Reference Parkin, Bray and Devesa1]. Despite being a theoretically preventable disease, cervical cancer is still the second most common cancer in women (after breast cancer) worldwide [Reference Bosch, Lorincz, Munoz, Meijer and Shah2], and the fifth most frequent cancer overall, with an estimated prevalence of 1·4 million cases. Incidence rates are highest in developing countries, which bear 80% of the burden of cervical cancer (Fig. 1). It is the most common cause of cancer-related mortality among women in many countries of Africa, South and Central America and the Caribbean.

Fig. 1. Annual invasive cervical cancer incidence and mortality rates in different regions of the world (IARC/GloboCan 2000). Rates are standardized according to age distribution of world population in 1960. (Figure provided by Eduardo Franco.)

In Western Europe, ∼33 500 new cases of cervical cancer are diagnosed each year and 15 000 women die from the disease [Reference Ferlay, Bray, Pisani and Parkin3]. In the United States, an estimated 13 000 new cases of cervical cancer, and 4000 deaths, occurred in 2003 [Reference Sanders and Taira4]. Incidence of cervical cancer increases with age, rising sharply to 15 cases/100 000 between the ages of 20 and 35 years, then fluctuating around 15–20 cases/100 000 in older women. Median age at diagnosis is 48 years. Costs of treatment are high and rising: in the United States in 1994, it was estimated that the combined costs of treating cervical cancer exceeded $4.5 billion, more than any other single sexually transmitted infection (STI) with the exception of HIV [Reference Kiviat, Koutsky, Paavonen, Holmes, Sparling, Mardh, Lemon, Stamm, Piot and Wasserheit5].

Most cervical cancers (at least 75%) are of the squamous cell type. Adenocarcinomas account for ∼15%, and have been increasing in incidence during the last few decades, particularly in younger women [Reference Zheng, Holford, Ma, Chen, Liu, Ward and Boyle6, Reference Sasieni and Adams7]. The term invasive refers to tumours in which the malignant cells have penetrated the underlying basement membrane and have infiltrated the stroma, with vascular and/or lymphatic invasion [Reference Kiviat, Koutsky, Paavonen, Holmes, Sparling, Mardh, Lemon, Stamm, Piot and Wasserheit5]. Invasive squamous cell cancers are graded as well-, moderately- or poorly-differentiated. Non-invasive squamous cell lesions are classified as pre-cancerous (atypia, dysplasia or cervical intra-epithelial neoplasia – CIN 1/2/3), or as carcinoma in situ (CIS), based on the thickness of epithelium occupied by undifferentiated basaloid cell types (cells resembling the basal cell layer of the epithelium). CIN lesions share some morphological features with CIS cells, and are thought to represent the earliest morphological changes associated with invasive cervical cancer (ICC). It is widely accepted that CIN and CIS are stages in the development of ICC, with CIS lesions thought to represent incipient ICC [Reference Kiviat, Koutsky, Paavonen, Holmes, Sparling, Mardh, Lemon, Stamm, Piot and Wasserheit5].

WHAT CAUSES CERVICAL CANCER?

Human papillomavirus (HPV)

The clinical and epidemiological profile of cervical cancer has long been recognized as suggestive of a sexually transmitted process, and numerous studies have confirmed the association between sexual exposure and development of CIS and ICC, stimulating a search for specific sexually transmitted agents that might act as carcinogens in genital cancers [Reference Kiviat, Koutsky, Paavonen, Holmes, Sparling, Mardh, Lemon, Stamm, Piot and Wasserheit5]. There is now consistent and convincing evidence that cervical cancer is in fact a rare consequence of infection of the genital tract by some mucosatropic types of HPV [Reference Bosch, Lorincz, Munoz, Meijer and Shah2].

HPV, a small (∼8000 bp), double-stranded DNA virus which infects epithelial cells, was first isolated and linked to cervical cancer pathogenesis in the early 1980s. Strong clinical, epidemiological and molecular biological evidence indicates that specific types of sexually transmitted HPVs are the central causal factor in at least 95% of ICC cases [Reference Bosch, Lorincz, Munoz, Meijer and Shah2, Reference Franco, Duarte-Franco and Ferenczy8]. Mounting evidence also implicates HPV infection in a considerable proportion of other cancers of the ano-genital tract, including cancers of the vulva, vagina, anal canal, penis and perianal skin; as well as in some oropharyngeal and oesophageal carcinomas [Reference Lehtinen and Paavonen9, Reference Gillison and Shah10].

There are over 100 types of HPV defined on the basis of DNA homology, of which over 40 strains can infect the epithelial lining of the ano-genital tract. Clinical and subclinical HPV infection is the most common STI today, with asymptomatic cervical HPV infection detectable in 5–40% of women of reproductive age [Reference Franco, Duarte-Franco and Ferenczy8, Reference Woodman, Collins and Winter11, Reference Burk, Kelly and Feldman12], and an estimated lifetime risk of infection with any genital HPV strain of 50–80%. Prevalence of HPV DNA (a measure of HPV exposure at a given time point) and HPV seroprevalence (a measure of cumulative HPV exposure) are strongly associated with number of lifetime and recent sexual partners [Reference Dillner, Kallings and Brihmer13Reference Karlsson, Jonsson and Edlund16]. Women tend to become HPV positive soon after initiation of sexual activity [Reference Woodman, Collins and Winter11, Reference Ho, Bierman, Beardsley, Chang and Burk17]. Around 20–30% of HPV-infected women harbour multiple HPV types [Reference Franco, Villa and Sobrinho18Reference Rousseau, Villa, Costa, Abrahamowicz, Rohan and Franco20]. HPV infection generally persists for 6–12 months in the genital tract (with HPV 16 tending to persist longer than other types) and then becomes undetectable [Reference Woodman, Collins and Winter11, Reference Elfgren, Kalantari, Moberger, Hagmar and Dillner21], although it is unclear what fraction of infections are completely cleared rather than maintained in a latent or persistent state [Reference Galloway22]. In general, prevalence peaks in women under 25 years of age, followed by a sharp decline to very low levels in older women. This may be due to acquired immunity to HPV infection over time and with multiple exposures [Reference Burk, Kelly and Feldman12].

Infection with HPV types classified as of low or no oncogenic risk (predominantly types 6 and 11) may cause subclinical infection and benign genital lesions (including low-grade CINs) and ano-genital warts (condylomata acuminata). Infection with high-risk, oncogenic HPV types (predominantly types 16 and 18) can lead to development of cervical cancer (Fig. 2). However over 90% of such infections, and the lesions (cytological abnormalities) caused by them, are transient or intermittent and resolve spontaneously [Reference Woodman, Collins and Winter11, Reference Ho, Bierman, Beardsley, Chang and Burk17, Reference Elfgren, Kalantari, Moberger, Hagmar and Dillner21]. Evidence suggests that, in general, cervical cancer develops only in the small proportion of women (<10%) with persistent (or latent) HPV infection [Reference Kjaer, van den Brule and Paull15, Reference Ho, Burk and Klien23].

Fig. 2. Mechanisms of human papillomavirus carcinogenesis. HSIL, High-grade squamous intra-epithelial lesion; LSIL, low-grade squamous intra-epithelial lesion; RB, retinoblastoma gene. [Reproduced with permission from Bosch et al. [Reference Bosch, Lorincz, Munoz, Meijer and Shah2] (courtesy of John Schiller).]

HPV type 16 is the most commonly occurring oncogenic HPV type, and is present in ∼50% of cervical cancers and high-grade cervical intra-epithelial neoplasias (CIN 2/3), and in ∼25% of low-grade cervical intra-epithelial neoplasias (CIN 1). It is estimated that ∼20% of adults become infected with HPV 16 at some stage of their lifetime. HPV types 16 and 18 together account for ∼70% of ICC cases worldwide [Reference Bosch, Manos and Munoz24]. The remaining ∼30% of cancers contain a ‘local cocktail’ of other oncogenic HPV types, most commonly 31, 33 and 45, and less commonly, types 35, 51, 52, 58, 59 [Reference Bosch, Lorincz, Munoz, Meijer and Shah2, Reference Munoz, Bosch and de Sanjose25]. The presence of other HPV types more rarely encountered in cervical cancer specimens, including HPV 39, 56, 68, 73 and 82, may be due to their oncogenic potential or to chance [Reference Munoz, Bosch and de Sanjose25, Reference Lehtinen and Paavonen26]. Unclassified HPV types are also detected in a small proportion of cervical cancers. HPV type distribution in the population and in patients with cervical cancer shows some geographical variation, which has yet to be fully characterized [Reference Bosch, Lorincz, Munoz, Meijer and Shah2].

In the IARC (International Agency for Research on Cancer) multi-centre case-control study, the pooled, age- and centre-adjusted odds ratio for presence of the 10 most common HPV types and cervical cancer was estimated at 83·3 [Reference Bosch, Lorincz, Munoz, Meijer and Shah2]. The risk of development of cervical cancer linked to infection with multiple HPV types (the proportion of which varies across studies and particularly according to the sensitivity of the HPV detection method used), does not appear to vary significantly from that linked to single HPV types [Reference Bosch, Lorincz, Munoz, Meijer and Shah2].

Co-factors

Given that only a very small subset of the many women infected with oncogenic types of HPV ever develop cervical cancer, interest has focused on the identification of other risk factors that might act in conjunction with HPV to increase the risk of persistent/latent HPV infection and/or of rates of progression of pre-cancerous lesions to high-grade cervical neoplasia and cancer. In addition to markers of risky sexual behaviour, including age at first sexual intercourse and number of sexual partners, other relevant co-factors include infection with other STIs, particularly Chlamydia trachomatis and herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2), smoking, socio-economic status, diet and hormonal factors, including parity and oral contraceptive use. In the case of chlamydial infection, case-control and longitudinal nested case- control studies indicate that C. trachomatis seropositivity increases the risk of development of cervical squamous cell carcinoma, possibly through induction of chronic inflammation and/or production of mutagenic metabolites [Reference Anttila, Saikku and Koskela27, Reference Smith, Munoz and Herrero28]. Evidence is conflicting with respect to the role of HSV-2 infection [Reference Lehtinen, Koskela and Jellum29Reference Zenilman31]. Host factors may also be important in susceptibility to development of ICC following HPV infection, including major histocompatibility complex (HLA) types and p53 (tumour suppressor gene) polymorphisms [Reference Koutsky, Kiviat, Holmes, Sparling, Mardh, Lemon, Stamm, Piot and Wasserheit14, Reference Hemminki, Dong and Vaittinen32].

Lack of male circumcision has also been identified as a potential risk factor for ICC. Male circumcision is associated with a reduced risk of penile HPV infection, and, in the case of men with a history of multiple female sex partners, a reduced risk of cervical cancer in their current female partners [Reference Castellsague, Bosch and Munoz33].

Thus, both environmental and host factors may indeed modulate the effect of HPV infection on cervical cancer development, and may to some extent account for the geographical variation in cervical cancer incidence and the variability in risk estimates reported in different populations. For example, in addition to high HPV infection rates, risk or co-factors for cervical cancer, including other STIs, young age at marriage, parity, low socio-economic status and poor health-seeking behaviour are more prevalent in developing countries. While more research is necessary to clarify the exact roles of some of these modulating factors, the elucidation of the central and consistent role of HPV infection in the development of cervical cancer has nevertheless enabled a clear focus to emerge in terms of its primary and secondary prevention.

Prevention of cervical cancer

Secondary prevention: cytological screening

The cornerstone of current cervical cancer prevention programmes is cytology-based screening employing Papanicolaou staining of cervical swab or cytobrush specimens containing exfoliated cervical cells (the Pap smear). This cytological staining process enables microscopic detection of cellular changes characteristic of HPV infection (koilocytosis, dyskariosis) and associated with various stages of the development of ICC (dysplasia, CIN 1/2/3, CISFootnote ). Women with pre-cancerous or cancerous lesions identified through Pap screening are referred for repeat Pap screening, colposcopy, biopsy and, where appropriate, treatment. The development and implementation of population-based Pap smear screening programmes for the early detection of pre-cancerous cervical lesions, together with aggressive treatment of women with abnormal biopsies, are thought to be largely responsible for the significantly reduced incidence of and mortality from ICC seen in many developed countries since the 1950s [Reference Franco, Duarte-Franco and Ferenczy8, Reference Gustafsson, Ponten, Zack and Adami35Reference Peto, Gilham, Fletcher and Matthews39].

The sensitivity of the Pap smear for detection of precursors of ICC is however sub-optimal and variable, ranging from around 30–90% in different studies, and is highly dependent on adequacy of sample collection, slide preparation and slide interpretation [Reference Franco, Duarte-Franco and Ferenczy8, Reference Martin-Hirsch, Koliopoulos and Paraskevaidis37, Reference Nanda, McCrory and Myers40]. The specificity of the test varies between 85% and 100%, and thus, its predictive value for accurately predicting the risk of development of CIS and ICC is imperfect. Approximately 7% of women who undergo Pap testing in the United States are diagnosed with a cytological abnormality requiring additional follow-up or evaluation, although the vast majority of these abnormalities would regress without intervention [Reference Crum41]. Identification of the small proportion of women with low-grade cytological abnormalities who are at risk for development of significant cervical disease is a major current challenge.

Variable standards of screening, the inherent performance characteristics of the Pap smear, along with inappropriate screening regimens and insufficient population coverage rates (particularly for women of low socio-economic status who are most at risk for HPV infection and the development of ICC) are likely to continue to result in unacceptable rates of morbidity and mortality from cervical cancer. In the United States, around 50% of cervical cancers (∼7000/year) are diagnosed in patients who are being screened [Reference Crum41]. In the developed world overall, it is estimated that 90 000 cases of and 40 000 deaths from ICC still occur. In the European Union, despite extensive population-based Pap screening efforts in many countries, ∼22 000 new cases of cervical cancer are diagnosed each year and 13 000 women die from it [42]. Indeed, evidence from several European countries suggests that incidence of cervical cancer has increased in recent years, probably as a result of increasing HPV infection rates due to changes in sexual behaviour, especially decreases in age at sexual debut [Reference Lehtinen and Paavonen26, Reference Laukkanen, Koskela and Pukkala43].

In developing countries, where cervical cancer rates are highest, effective, high-quality population-based cytology screening programmes have proved very difficult to implement [Reference Goldie, Kuhn, Denny, Pollack and Wright44]. Where they exist, screening programmes lack coverage, accessibility, effectiveness and acceptability. Due to their inadequacy, cervical cancer is often detected at a late stage, with incidence often equal to mortality.

This situation, together with the rising cost of traditional cytology-based cervical cancer control in developed countries, has raised interest in a number of new approaches to cervical cancer control. These include: redesigning cytology-based screening strategies in terms of age at which screening commences and frequency of screening; introduction of thin-layer liquid-based cytology (LBC) to improve the performance (through improving smear quality and visibility) and sensitivity of cytology for detection of pre-cancerous lesions; and instituting a more conservative approach to the clinical management of low-grade cytological abnormalities [Reference Franco, Duarte-Franco and Ferenczy8]. Screening for high-risk HPV types in cervical samples, using DNA hybrid capture and nucleic acid amplification technology, is being explored for its utility both as a primary screening tool (particularly in women over 30 where HPV prevalence is lower), and as an adjunctive test in the management of women referred for abnormal cervical cytology [Reference Solomon, Davey and Kurman34, Reference Cuzick, Szarewski and Cubie45Reference Peto, Gilham and Deacon48]. Such approaches may decrease the numbers of women who undergo unnecessary aggressive treatment for low-grade cytological lesions identified through traditional Pap screening, and may improve detection rates of CIN 2+ without increasing the colposcopy referral rate.

Given the difficulties involved in implementing effective screening programmes, primary prevention of infection with high-risk HPV types may be the most efficient and logistically feasible preventive intervention for cervical cancer, particularly in developing countries.

Primary prevention: prophylactic vaccines

HPV is in many ways an ideal target for vaccine development. It is a simple virus, with a small, stable genome which is not prone to mutation. DNA sequences of genital HPV types, particularly HPV 16, are highly conserved globally. It is possible to synthesize DNA-free, non-infectious virus-like particles (VLPs) in the laboratory through expression and self-assembly of the major capsid protein antigen L1 in eukaryotic cells. VLPs mimic the natural structure of the virion, and are capable of generating a potent humoral immune response with neutralizing antibodies in both animals and humans, with evidence of T-cell responses also reported in some studies [Reference Bosch, Lorincz, Munoz, Meijer and Shah22].

In 2002, Koutsky and colleagues [Reference Koutsky, Ault and Wheeler49] reported on a randomized double-blind proof-of-concept trial of a monovalent synthetic vaccine consisting of DNA-free, HPV 16 L1 capsid protein-containing VLPs synthesized in a yeast expression system. In the trial, 2392 women aged 16–23 years received intramuscular injections of either vaccine or placebo at day 0, month 2 and month 6. After a median follow-up period of 17·4 months, no cases of persistent HPV 16 infection had occurred in the vaccine group (n=768 after exclusion and loss to follow-up), while all nine cases of HPV 16-related CIN occurred in the placebo group (incidence 3·8/100 person-years). In according-to-protocol (ATP) analyses, the efficacy of the vaccine in preventing transient HPV infection, persistent HPV infection and pre-invasive disease was 91·7%, 100% and 100% respectively, at 18 months. A seroconversion rate of 99·7% was reported, and mean antibody titres were ∼60-fold higher in vaccinated women than in women naturally infected with HPV 16 at enrolment.

The high levels of protection seen even against transient HPV infection suggest that the vaccine may induce protective immunity in at least some cases, while in others it may reduce the viral load and limit rounds of re-inoculation [Reference Galloway22]. The primary mediators of protection are thought to be virus-neutralizing antibodies, transudated from serum into the cervical mucus. Cell-mediated immunity may also be involved.

More recently, in a Phase II trial of a bivalent HPV 16/18 L1 VLP vaccine in 1113 women, with 2·5 years follow-up, both ATP and intention-to-treat (ITT) analyses showed high efficacy of the bivalent vaccine against both incident and persistent HPV 16 and 18 infections, even with use of vaginal self-sampling, the most sensitive method for HPV detection [Reference Harper, Franco and Wheeler50]. In the ITT analysis, vaccine efficacy was 95·1% against persistent HPV 16/18 infection, and 92·9% against cytological abnormalities associated with HPV 16/18 infection (CIN 1/2); ATP analyses also demonstrated high efficacy against incident HPV 16/18 infections. The efficacy of the bivalent vaccine against HPV 18 infection is particularly important, since HPV 18 is more closely associated with cervical adenocarcinoma, which is more difficult to detect by Pap screening than squamous cell carcinoma [Reference Lehtinen and Paavonen51].

While these results are encouraging, it will be necessary to wait for the results of further ITT analyses, as well as longer-term efficacy data, to evaluate fully the effectiveness of HPV VLP vaccines in protecting against development of ICC.

Large-scale, multi-centre, multi-country Phase III efficacy trials of bivalent (16/18) VLP vaccines are now being carried out in Europe, North, Central and South America, and Asia [Reference Schiller and Davies52]. The end-points of these trials are incident and persistent HPV infection (2–3 years follow-up) and associated cytological and histological lesions (CIN; 2–3 and 4–5 years follow-up). Phase II and III trials of a quadrivalent HPV vaccine (HPV 6, 11, 16 and 18), which should, in principle, simultaneously protect against infection with the predominant strains causing both ano-genital warts and ICC, are also currently underway [Reference Schiller and Davies52], with promising preliminary results [Reference Villa, Costa and Petta53]; as are plans for development of second-generation HPV vaccines containing additional high-risk types. Therapeutic HPV vaccines – which eradicate or reduce numbers of HPV-infected cells – are also promising, although in the early stages of development [Reference Galloway22, Reference Davidson, Boswell and Sehr54].

Issues related to implementation and effectiveness of vaccination programmes against cervical cancer

If the large-scale efficacy trials currently underway are successful, one or more prophylactic HPV vaccines could reach registration as early as 2006/2007. Several important unresolved issues remain with respect to implementation of a vaccination programme against HPV infection, and with respect to the effect of vaccination programmes on incidence of and mortality from ICC.

Effectiveness of vaccination in prevention of cervical cancer at the population level

Both natural and induced immunity to HPV infection appear to be largely type-specific. A number of studies have found that different HPV types are serologically distinct and do not produce strong cross-neutralizing antibody responses [Reference Kirnbauer55]. This is borne out by the results from one trial of a monovalent HPV 16 VLP vaccine, where an equal number of cases (22 in each group) of CIN that were not associated with HPV 16 occurred in the placebo and vaccine recipient groups [Reference Koutsky, Ault and Wheeler49].

If this is the case, the proportion of cases of cervical cancer prevented by vaccination will depend on the proportion attributable to the specific genotypes in the vaccine. A recent pooled analysis of data from international surveys on HPV type distribution in cervical cancer suggests that a vaccine including types 16 and 18 could potentially prevent 71% of cervical cancers worldwide [Reference Munoz, Bosch and Castellsague56]. The cost of including additional HPV types in a multivalent vaccine will have to be balanced against the additional fraction of cases of cervical cancer prevented, and this issue is further complicated by the fact that prevalence of certain oncogenic HPV types varies in different regions of the world. Thus, the percentage of cases potentially prevented by a 16/18 vaccine would be higher in Asia and Europe/North America – where there is a higher prevalence of HPV 16/18 in cervical cancers – than in other regions of the world, including sub-Saharan Africa and Central/South America, where higher proportions of types 45 and 31 respectively, are seen [Reference Munoz, Bosch and Castellsague56]. A vaccine containing the seven most common HPV types (16, 18, 45, 31, 33, 52 and 58) would theoretically prevent ∼87% of cervical cancers worldwide, with little regional variation. That a number of different HPV types are implicated in cervical cancer is a challenge for the development of effective vaccines.

However, although while the balance of evidence suggest that different HPV types behave as independent STIs [Reference Liaw, Hildesheim and Burk57], some studies suggest that, in natural infections, low levels of interaction may occur between certain types which are closely phylogenetically related (including types 16, 31 and 33; and types 18 and 45) [Reference Ho, Studentsov and Hall58, Reference Thomas, Hughes and Kuypers59]. These interactions may occur either directly at the level of the virus itself (through competition for ecological niches) or indirectly, for example at the level of the immune response (through cross-reactivity of antibodies and/or T-cell-mediated responses). Some evidence also exists for antagonistic interactions between HPV 16 and HPV 6/11 [Reference Rousseau, Villa, Costa, Abrahamowicz, Rohan and Franco20, Reference Luostarinen60]. Low-level immunological interaction may be due at least in part to T-cell responses to HPV gene products that would not be contained in the vaccine.

If competing risks for infection between HPV types do exist, the equilibrium of other oncogenic types might be affected if a type-specific vaccine successfully prevented HPV 16/18 infection, due to filling in of ecological niches created by reduction or removal of the most prevalent HPV types [Reference Lipsitch61]. Reduced cross-protection from disease could also result from a decrease in prevalence of cross-protective (antagonistic) HPV types [Reference Luostarinen60]. It is also possible that, as a result of protection against infection with HPV 16/18 and subsequent development of 16/18-related cervical cancer, the pool of women susceptible to development of ‘replacement’ cervical cancer, after a longer period of infection with other, less virulent, non-vaccine, oncogenic HPV types, could increase [Reference Garnett and Waddell62, Reference Hughes, Garnett and Koutsky63].

On the other hand, artificial VLPs are somewhat different to natural HPV virions, and it has been suggested that the immune response stimulated by HPV 16/18 vaccination might also protect against genetically related HPV types, such as 33 or 45. Low-level cell-mediated cross-reactivity between genetically related HPV types may occur because of the different (not so conformation dependent) nature of the epitopes [Reference Liaw, Hildesheim and Burk57]. Cross-reactive cell-mediated immunity could potentially keep the oncogenic non-vaccine types under control due to naturally occurring boosting by the benign non-vaccine included types [Reference Lehtinen and Paavonen26]. Under this scenario, it is possible that the prevalence of other (non-vaccine) genetically related HPV types could decrease rather than increase following vaccination.

With current knowledge, it is thus difficult to predict whether the existence of low-level interactions between HPV types would decrease or increase the predicted fraction of cervical cancer cases prevented by a 16/18 vaccine, in relation to the current prevalence of these types in ICC. Monitoring systems for surveillance of breakthrough infections, and of the epidemiological distribution of vaccine and non-vaccine HPV types, will be necessary following introduction of vaccination programmes.

Cost-effectiveness of vaccination in the context of continuing screening programmes

Given, in any event, that the vaccines currently under evaluation will not protect against all cervical oncogenic viruses, continuation of Pap screening programmes will be necessary, even with widespread vaccination programmes. One could expect, however, that with an effective vaccine there would be a reduced frequency of abnormal Pap smears and pre-invasive disease – and, thus, of the costs of follow-up – as well as of ICC [Reference Goldie, Grima, Kohli, Wright, Weinstein and Franco64]. Vaccination could also complement screening programmes, and further decrease incidence of cervical cancer if women who do not regularly attend for screening (where ∼50% of cervical cancers are diagnosed [Reference Sasieni, Cuzick and Lynch-Farmery65]), can be reached by vaccination programmes. Preliminary studies suggest that in the United States, vaccinating adolescent girls for high-risk HPV infections in combination with screening is a cost-effective approach, particularly if it were possible to delay the age at which screening commences, as well as to reduce the frequency of screening [Reference Sanders and Taira4, Reference Kulasingam and Myers66]. These projections are, however, sensitive to the cost of the vaccine and the length of protection – two presently unknown variables. Furthermore, cervical screening programmes are expensive in the United States compared with European countries, costing an estimated US $6 billion annually [Reference Schiller and Davies52].

Moreover, given the lower prevalence of HPV 16 and 18 in low-grade CIN than in ICC, there is uncertainty about the exact proportion of cases of CIN that would be prevented by vaccination, and some mathematical modelling studies have suggested that the effect of vaccination on overall HPV prevalence, and on prevalence of low-grade cervical abnormalities, may not be greatly reduced [Reference Goldie, Grima, Kohli, Wright, Weinstein and Franco64]. On the other hand, if vaccination significantly reduces the population prevalence of HPV 16/18 infection, as well as of its sequelae [Reference Hughes, Garnett and Koutsky63], HPV testing could eventually replace cervical cytology as a primary screening tool, as the specificity and, therefore, positive predictive value of primary HPV screening could be significantly increased. This could decrease screening costs and improve the performance of screening programmes [Reference Cuzick, Szarewski and Cubie45].

Finally, the duration of the antibody response induced by the HPV vaccine remains to be determined. To be truly efficacious, the vaccine would need to confer protection lasting from adolescence for several decades. Studies on the duration of protection conferred against sexual transmission of hepatitis B (HBV) after childhood immunization with a HBV vaccine – which is technically similar to the HPV VLP vaccine – indicate that boosters are likely to be needed at least at 10-year intervals to maintain high efficacy against infection [Reference Whittle, Jaffar and Wansbrough67]. In the monovalent HPV 16 VLP vaccine trial, results presented at the American Society for Microbiology Conference in Washington in November 2004 indicated that vaccine efficacy remained high four years after vaccination, with protection waning for only a small proportion of women (7/755 vaccinated women having developed HPV 16 infections as opposed to 111/750 women who received placebo injections). Further studies are needed to determine whether booster vaccination is necessary and indeed efficacious, and at what time intervals it should be carried out. The need for and cost of booster vaccines to extend duration of protection will be critical in terms of both the design and cost-effectiveness of vaccination programmes.

Who and when to vaccinate?

HPV is a highly prevalent and widely distributed infection, and HPV prevalence and seroprevalence increase rapidly among young women once they become sexually active [Reference Woodman, Collins and Winter11, Reference Burk, Kelly and Feldman12, Reference Ho, Studentsov and Hall58, Reference Stone, Karem and Sternberg68, Reference Winer, Lee, Hughes, Adam, Kiviat and Koutsky69]. In order to achieve optimal efficacy, vaccination against HPV is, therefore, likely to be most effective if it targets adolescent or pre-adolescent girls before they become sexually active and are thus exposed to infection. This is particularly the case given the questionable efficacy of condoms in preventing HPV transmission, as well as evidence suggesting that transmission of HPV may occur through non-penetrative sex [Reference Galloway22]. Schools-based vaccination programmes may be most effective at reaching significant proportions of the target population, as well as being cost-effective in terms of reducing costs of administering a three-dose regimen [Reference Sanders and Taira4]. Initially, ‘catch-up’ vaccination of older cohorts of women, and/or of population subgroups at high risk of infection, would also be necessary to prevent further HPV infection in such groups [Reference Crum41], and also, possibly, to decrease the risk of developing cervical cancer in women already infected [Reference Schiller and Davies52].

A further question is whether males should also be vaccinated, both to prevent occurrence of ano-genital warts (if the multivalent vaccines currently under evaluation do indeed protect against the latter), as well as to interrupt transmission of, and thus reduce the population prevalence of, oncogenic HPVs. Mathematical modelling studies suggest that vaccinating boys as well as girls would theoretically result in a greater decrease in HPV prevalence in girls than vaccinating only girls, due to herd immunity, although the additional proportion of cases estimated to be saved by vaccinating boys as well as girls varies across studies, and according to the model structures and parameter estimates used [Reference Hughes, Garnett and Koutsky63, Reference Taira70]. On the other hand, there are as yet no data on the efficacy of HPV vaccination in preventing infection in boys, and some studies suggest that there may be a gender differential in the immune response to natural HPV infection [Reference Stone, Karem and Sternberg68], raising questions about the possible differential efficacy of a vaccine in boys (as has recently been demonstrated for the glycoprotein D vaccine against herpes simplex virus infection [Reference Stanberry, Spruance and Cunningham71]). Cost-effectiveness considerations will also be paramount here. A recently published modelling study, using US data and an estimated cost of $US100 per vaccine dose, suggests that if high vaccine coverage of girls is achieved, vaccination of boys may not be the most cost-effective strategy, since it would result in only a small further reduction in rates of HPV infections and cancer cases, at a high cost [Reference Taira70]. In certain instances, however, such as those in which vaccine efficacy wanes rapidly without boosters, or overall vaccine coverage is low, vaccination of males could have a substantial effect and would be more cost-effective [Reference Taira70].

If the aim of vaccination is to reduce significantly HPV infection rates at the population level, in addition to preventing the development of cervical cancer at the individual level, high population coverage rates will be necessary, particularly if only girls are vaccinated [Reference Hughes, Garnett and Koutsky63].

Issues of parental and societal acceptability may well arise in relation to vaccination of young pre-sexually active girls against a STI [Reference Kulasingam and Myers66], particularly since the general public have little or no knowledge of HPV or its involvement with cervical cancer [Reference Schiller and Davies52, Reference Waller, McCaffery, Nazroo and Wardle72]. Appropriate and sensitive public information and education programmes will be necessary to communicate the public health benefits of vaccination to the general public. It will also be necessary to emphasize that the vaccine will not be fully effective in preventing cervical cancer, in order not to have an adverse effect on levels of risky sexual behaviour. Additionally, if women who are vaccinated perceive themselves to be at low risk for developing cervical cancer, and as a result do not participate in screening as recommended, gains from vaccination may be offset or even reversed [Reference Schiller and Davies52, Reference Kulasingam and Myers66].

Vaccination in developing countries

Developing countries, where the burden of disease occurs, and where effective screening programmes are difficult to implement, stand to gain most from the introduction of an effective vaccine against cervical cancer. However, the cost of producing and administering a parenteral vaccine using the current VLP methodology is high and may well be prohibitive for developing countries, particularly given that cervical cancer is not necessarily a high priority in countries with many other competing health problems and needs [Reference Schiller and Davies52]. Possibilities for cheaper and simpler vaccine production include the use of bacterial (E. coli) L1 expression systems to produce recombinant L1 major capsid proteins, which, after trypsin digestion, are capable of self-assembling into pentameric capsomeres which contain neutralization epitopes [Reference Galloway22]. Animal models have shown such capsomeres to be protective against infection. HPV 11 L1 capsomeres have been successfully used to generate high-titre polyclonal antibodies in rabbits, which were capable of neutralizing HPV 11 virions in vitro [Reference Rose, White, Li, Suzich, Lane and Garcea73].

Considerable efforts have been made by several groups to develop alternatives to parenteral vaccine delivery, that is so-called ‘needle-free’ methods such as oral/intranasal mucosal delivery and/or development of transgenic edible plant-based vaccines. Mucosally (orally) delivered vaccines are cheaper and easier to administer, as well as being more acceptable to recipients. Recent studies have shown that both HPV 16 and HPV 18 VLPs are immunogenic when administered orally, and that oral co-administration of mucosal adjuvants (E. coli heat-labile enterotoxin mutant R192G or CpG DNA) can significantly improve anti-VLP humoral responses in peripheral blood and in genital mucosal secretions [Reference Gerber, Lane and Brown74]. Development of DNA vaccines, which are particularly suitable for developing countries because of their ease of production and delivery, is another possibility [Reference Galloway22].

CONCLUSIONS

There is currently real hope that an effective vaccine capable of protecting against infection with HPV, and thereby of preventing the development of a significant proportion of cases of ICC, may be available within the next few years. Such a vaccine would be of great public health value in terms of reducing incidence of and mortality from ICC, and correspondingly the need for colposcopy, biopsy and treatment. A multivalent vaccine also protective against infection with HPV types 6 and 11 would additionally reduce incidence of ano-genital warts, which, although not fatal, are nevertheless a troublesome and difficult to treat consequence of infection.

There is, however, at present considerable uncertainty about the most effective strategy for vaccination, including: the age at which to vaccinate; the effect of vaccinating only women as opposed to both women and men; as well as the impact of vaccination on HPV and cervical cancer incidence at the population level. Questions remain concerning the exact pathways in the pathogenesis of cervical cancer; the factors determining the current epidemiological distribution of HPV types and the proportion of cervical cancer cases attributable to these types; the effect of type-specific immunity on the distribution of non-vaccine HPV types and the likely effect of this on overall ICC incidence; and the cost-effectiveness of a widespread vaccination programme given the necessity for continued cervical screening programmes. The answers to many of these questions will probably not be known until many years after the introduction of vaccination programmes.

Further studies, including post-licensure, community-randomized phase IV trials, with long-term passive follow-up of cohorts of vaccines and non-vaccinees by population-based cancer registries, will be necessary to evaluate the effectiveness of vaccination on HPV prevalence and on associated disease at the population level, as well as to evaluate the efficacy of vaccinating both females and males compared to females only [Reference Lehtinen and Paavonen26, Reference Lehtinen and Paavonen51]. In addition to the need for further empirical studies, mathematical modelling will be an important tool for predicting and assessing the effect of vaccination on HPV incidence and prevalence and on morbidity and mortality from ICC, including herd immunity effects; as well as for analysing the cost-effectiveness of vaccination programmes in different contexts. Intensive surveillance of both the prevalence of HPV types as well as of their proportional distribution in cervical cancer and its precursors (including to detect breakthrough infections) will be an essential part of vaccination programmes. Finally, in developing countries, which are most at need and stand to benefit most from vaccination, methods of vaccine production and delivery that are simpler and cheaper than those based on VLP technology will probably be necessary.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

I thank Eduardo Franco and F. Xavier Bosch for providing me with figures, and my anonymous referees for their helpful comments on the manuscript.

DECLARATION OF INTEREST

None.

Footnotes

In the recently introduced US Bethesda terminology system, these stages correspond to atypical squamous cells (ASC-US or ASC-H: cells which are abnormal but not frankly reactive or dysplastic); low-grade squamous intra-epithelial lesions (LGSIL; mild dysplasia and the changes associated with HPV infection, known as koilocytosis); and high-grade squamous intra-epithelial lesions (HGSIL; moderate and severe dysplasia, carcimona in situ) [Reference Solomon, Davey and Kurman34].

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Figure 0

Fig. 1. Annual invasive cervical cancer incidence and mortality rates in different regions of the world (IARC/GloboCan 2000). Rates are standardized according to age distribution of world population in 1960. (Figure provided by Eduardo Franco.)

Figure 1

Fig. 2. Mechanisms of human papillomavirus carcinogenesis. HSIL, High-grade squamous intra-epithelial lesion; LSIL, low-grade squamous intra-epithelial lesion; RB, retinoblastoma gene. [Reproduced with permission from Bosch et al. [2] (courtesy of John Schiller).]