4.2 Article

HPV vaccination coverage for pediatric, adolescent and young adult patients receiving care in a childhood cancer survivor program

Journal

PREVENTIVE MEDICINE REPORTS
Volume 29, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2022.101972

Keywords

HPV vaccination; Pediatric; Adolescent; Young adult cancer survivors; Survivorship; Secondary cancer prevention

Funding

  1. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality [R03HS026982]
  2. National Institute of Health?s National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences [UL1TR002494]
  3. Masonic Cancer Center [P30 CA77598]

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The objective of this study was to determine HPV vaccination coverage among individuals participating in a childhood cancer survivor program. The results showed that HPV vaccination initiation and completion of the 3-dose series are still suboptimal in a high-risk patient population.
Pediatric, adolescent and young adult patients undergoing cancer treatment and/or hematopoietic stem cell transplant are at increased risk for developing a secondary human papillomavirus (HPV)-associated malignancy. The objective of this study was to determine HPV vaccination coverage among individuals participating in a childhood cancer survivor program (CCSP). A retrospective cohort study was conducted among CCSP patients age 11-26 years attending a CCSP visit between 2014 and 2019. Survivors were age-, sex-, and race-matched 1:2 with controls without cancer. Data were abstracted from the electronic health record and state-based vaccination registry. Analysis was limited to Minnesota residents to minimize missing vaccination data. Survivorship care plans (SCPs) were reviewed for vaccine recommendations. 592 patients were included in the analyses (200 CCSP patients; 392 controls). By study design, mean age (18.4 years), race (72 % white), and sex (49 % female) were similar in the two groups. Among CCSP patients 22 % resided in a rural area compared to 3.8 % of controls. Vaccination coverage among CCSP patients was not statistically significantly different from controls [60.0 % vs 66.3 %, OR = 0.82, 95 % CI: (0.55, 1.23), p = 0.35]. Completion of 3 doses was not different between groups even though 3 doses is recommended for all CCSP patients regardless of age at initiation (28.5 % vs 30.1 %, p = 0.09). Only 8.0 % of SCPs recommended HPV vaccination. Although patients participating in a CCSP did not have significantly different HPV vaccination coverage compared to controls, HPV vaccination initiation and 3-dose series completion are still suboptimal in a patient population at high-risk of a secondary HPV-associated cancer.

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