Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Herpes Papillomavirus (HPV) and Varicella-zoster Virus (VZV) Vaccination Ellen Barbouche, MD Primary Care Conference 18 April 2007.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Herpes Papillomavirus (HPV) and Varicella-zoster Virus (VZV) Vaccination Ellen Barbouche, MD Primary Care Conference 18 April 2007."— Presentation transcript:

1 Herpes Papillomavirus (HPV) and Varicella-zoster Virus (VZV) Vaccination Ellen Barbouche, MD Primary Care Conference 18 April 2007

2 Learning Objectives No financial disclosures Review HPV and VZV vaccination efficacy, adverse effects, and guidelines

3 Case 1 24 year old female for preventive health exam “Should I get that HPV vaccine?” History of cervical dysplasia treated with cryosurgery On oral contraceptive

4 HPV virulence Low risk types (6 and 11) cause low grade cervical cell changes and genital warts High risk types detected in 99% of cervical cancers –Types 16 and 18 cause 70% of cervical cancers HPV associated with cancers of vulva, vagina, penis, anus, oral cavity and pharynx

5 Sexual Activity

6 Risk of HPV Transmission Most consistent predictor of HPV infection is number of sexual partners –Females age 15-19 with median 1.4 lifetime male partners; age 20-24 median is 2.8 –Of sexually active women, 5.7% of 9 th graders & 20.2% of 12 th graders had >4 sex partners

7 HPV Natural History 70% of new infections clear within 1 year, 90% within 2 years Persistent infection varies by HPV type

8 HPV prevention Correct and consistent condom use reduces HPV rates by 70% Abstinence Quadrivalent (types 6,11,16,18) vaccine

9 HPV Vaccine Administration 3 dose series: now, 2 month and 6 months Contains no thimerosal or antibiotic

10 HPV Vaccine Efficacy 95.2% efficacy against CIN 1, CIN 2/3, or adenocarcinoma in situ 98.9% against HPV 6,11,16, or 18 genital warts 89.5% against persistent HPV infection 100% effective against other types in women previously HPV exposed Duration of protection studies now at 3 years

11 HPV Vaccine Immunogenicity After completion of 3 doses, >99.9% of participants had antibody to all 4 HPV types Antibody titers after vaccination are higher than those after natural infection

12 HPV Vaccine Adverse Events 83.9% pain 2.8% severe pain 2% swelling 0.9% erythema 4% fever <0.1% serious events, vaccine equal to placebo

13 HPV Cost Effectiveness Assume $377 per dose series, 90% lifetime efficacy: 58% reduction in lifetime cervical cancer risk and $24,300 per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) Assume $300 per dose series, $100 booster at 10 years, same efficacy: 62% reduction in lifetime cervical cancer risk and $14,600 per QALY

14 HPV Vaccine Recommendations Routine vaccination at 11-12 years Catch up vaccination for age 13-26 Would you vaccinate Case 1?

15 Case 2 71 year old male for hypertension follow up “Should I get that shingles vaccination?” Meds: Aspirin and Atenolol PMH: HTN and THA

16 Varicella-Zoster Virus (VZV) Reactivation of latent VZV causes herpes zoster (shingles) Risk of zoster increases with increasing age, beginning at 50 Zoster develops in 30% of people over lifetime, and up to 50% of 85 year olds

17 VZV Infectivity in US (prior to use of primary varicella vaccination)

18 VZV Complications Cranial or peripheral verve palsies Encephalitis Myelitis Post-herpetic neuralgia –Most likely to occur if host > age 50 –Of people > age 60 with zoster, 40% have post-herpetic neuralgia

19 Kimberlin D and Whitley R. N Engl J Med 2007;356:1338-1343 Host Factors in Latent VZV Infection and Reactivation

20 VZV Vaccine Strength Varivax 1,350 plaque-forming units/dose Proquad (MMR + VZV) 9,772 pfu/dose Zostavax 19,400 pfu/dose –Higher titer due to decreased cell-mediated immunity in older population

21 VZV Vaccine Efficacy Evidence 38,546 subjects over age 60 followed for 3 years Incidence of zoster 5.4 vs. 11.1 cases per 1,000 person-years, vaccinated vs. placebo (51% decrease) Post-herpetic neuralgia: 0.5 vs.1.4 cases per 1,000 person-years, vaccinated vs. placebo (67% decrease)

22 Adverse Effects of VZV Vaccine (All % vaccinated vs. placebo) Injection site phenomena: –Varicella-like rash (0.1% vs. 0.04%) –Erythema (36% vs. 7%) –Pain or tenderness (35% vs. 9%) –Swelling (26% vs. 5%) –Pruritus (7% vs. 1%) Cardiac events (0.6% vs. 0.4%)

23 VZV Vaccine Contraindications Prior anaphylactic reactions to gelatin, neomycin or other vaccine component Immunodeficiency condition or immune suppressive therapy Active, untreated tuberculosis Pregnancy

24 VZV Vaccine Cost $14,877-$34,852 per QALY (assumes $150 per vaccination) 17 vaccinations to prevent single case of zoster –Cost per prevented case $3,330 31 vaccinations to prevent single case of post-herpetic neuralgia –Cost per prevented case $6,405

25 VZV Vaccine Questions Vaccinate 50-59 year olds Shifting VZV epidemiology –Primary vaccination –Duration of zoster vaccine efficacy Immunocompromised quagmire –Diabetes mellitus –Steroids –Anticipated immunesuppression Prior zoster

26 VZV Vaccine Recommendations Single dose to adults age > 60, regardless of prior varicella history Would you vaccinate Case 2?

27 Bibliography Markowitz, LE et al. Quadrivalent Human Papillomavirus Vaccine. MMWR. 2007:56(RR02);1-24. Kimberlin, DW and Whitney, RJ. Varicella- zoster Vaccine for the Prevention of Herpes Zoster. NEJM. 2007;356:1338-43.


Download ppt "Herpes Papillomavirus (HPV) and Varicella-zoster Virus (VZV) Vaccination Ellen Barbouche, MD Primary Care Conference 18 April 2007."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google