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Assessing the Long-Term Role of Vaccination against HPV after Loop Electrosurgical Excision Procedure (LEEP): A Propensity-Score Matched Comparison

Authors :
Giorgio Bogani
Francesco Raspagliesi
Francesco Sopracordevole
Andrea Ciavattini
Alessandro Ghelardi
Tommaso Simoncini
Marco Petrillo
Francesco Plotti
Salvatore Lopez
Jvan Casarin
Maurizio Serati
Ciro Pinelli
Gaetano Valenti
Alice Bergamini
Barbara Giannella
Andrea Dell’Acqua
Ermelinda Monti
Paolo Vercellini
Giovanni D’ippolito
Lorenzo Aguzzoli
Vincenzo D Mandato
Paola Carunchio
Gabriele Carlifante
Luca Giannella
Cono Scaffa
Francesca Falcone
Stefano Ferla
Chiara Borghi
Antonino Ditto
Mario Malzoni
Andrea Giannini
Maria Giovanna Salerno
Viola Liberale
Biagio Contino
Cristina Donfrancesco
Michele Desiato
Anna Myriam Perrone
Giulia Dondi
Pierandrea De Iaco
Umberto Leone Roberti Maggiore
Mauro Signorelli
Valentina Chiappa
Simone Ferrero
Giuseppe Sarpietro
Maria G Matarazzo
Antonio Cianci
Sara Bocio
Simona Ruisi
Rocco Guerrisi
Claudia Brusadelli
Lavinia Mosca
Raffaele Tinelli
Rosa De Vincenzo
Gian Franco Zannoni
Gabriella Ferrandina
Salvatore Dessole
Roberto Angioli
Stefano Greggi
Arsenio Spinillo
Fabio Ghezzi
Nicola Colacurci
Margherita Fischetti
Annunziata Carlea
Fulvio Zullo
Ludovico Muzii
Giovanni Scambia
Pierluigi Benedetti Panici
Violante Di Donato
Source :
Vaccines, Vol 8, Iss 4, p 717 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2020.

Abstract

Background: Primary prevention through vaccination is a prophylactic approach aiming to reduce the risk of developing human papillomavirus (HPV)-related lesions. No mature and long-term data supported the adoption of vaccination in women undergoing conization. Methods: This is a retrospective multi-institutional study. Charts of consecutive patients undergoing conization between 2010 and 2014 were collected. All patients included had at least 5 years of follow-up. We compared outcomes of patients undergoing conization plus vaccination and conization alone. A propensity-score matching algorithm was applied in order to reduce allocation biases. The risk of developing recurrence was estimated using Kaplan-Meir and Cox hazard models. Results: Overall, charts of 1914 women were analyzed. The study group included 116 (6.1%) and 1798 (93.9%) women undergoing conization plus vaccination and conization alone, respectively. Five-year recurrence rate was 1.7% (n = 2) and 5.7% (n = 102) after conization plus vaccination and conization alone, respectively (p = 0.068). After the application of a propensity-score matching, we selected 100 patients undergoing conization plus vaccination and 200 patients undergoing conization alone. The crude number of recurrences was 2 (2%) and 11 (5.5%) for patients undergoing conization plus vaccination and conization alone, respectively (p = 0.231). Vaccination had no impact on persistent lesions (no negative examination between conization and new cervical dysplasia; p = 0.603), but reduced the risk of recurrent disease (patients who had at least one negative examination between conization and the diagnosis of recurrent cervical dysplasia; p = 0.031). Conclusions: Patients having vaccination experience a slightly lower risk of recurrence than women who had not, although not statistically significantly different. Further evidence is needed to assess the cost effectiveness of adopting vaccination in this setting.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2076393X
Volume :
8
Issue :
4
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Vaccines
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.24d464ac68c648e48483bb4f1465b210
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines8040717