Marit Middeldorp, Robine Donken, Aarthi Nirmal, Brenda Smith, Ana Citlali Marquez, Julie A Bettinger, Marc Brisson, Ann N Burchell, Simon R Dobson, Meena Dawar, Eduardo L Franco, Troy Grennan, Mel Krajden, Marie-Hélène Mayrand, Shelly McNeil, Monika Naus, Chantal Sauvageau, Joel Singer, Laurie W Smith, Gina S Ogilvie, Manish Sadarangani
{"title":"加入非价疫苗的四价HPV疫苗评估研究(QUEST-ADVANCE):一项观察性队列研究的方案。","authors":"Marit Middeldorp, Robine Donken, Aarthi Nirmal, Brenda Smith, Ana Citlali Marquez, Julie A Bettinger, Marc Brisson, Ann N Burchell, Simon R Dobson, Meena Dawar, Eduardo L Franco, Troy Grennan, Mel Krajden, Marie-Hélène Mayrand, Shelly McNeil, Monika Naus, Chantal Sauvageau, Joel Singer, Laurie W Smith, Gina S Ogilvie, Manish Sadarangani","doi":"10.1136/bmjopen-2025-100560","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Introduction: </strong>The Quadrivalent human papillomavirus (HPV) Vaccine Evaluation Study with Addition of the Nonavalent Vaccine Study (QUEST-ADVANCE) aims to provide insight into the long-term immunogenicity and effectiveness of one, two and three HPV vaccine doses. Here, we describe the protocol for QUEST-ADVANCE.</p><p><strong>Methods and analysis: </strong>QUEST-ADVANCE is an observational cohort study including males and females who are unvaccinated or vaccinated with the quadrivalent or nonavalent HPV vaccine in British Columbia, Canada. Female participants who are unvaccinated or vaccinated with 1-3 doses of the quadrivalent or nonavalent HPV vaccine at 9-14 years of age will be recruited approximately 5 or 12 years postvaccination eligibility. Male participants who are unvaccinated or vaccinated with 1 or 2 doses of the nonavalent HPV vaccine at 9-14 years of age will be recruited at approximately 5 years postvaccination eligibility. The study involves a maximum of four visits over a period of 4-5 years for female participants, and two visits over a 12-month period for male participants. At each visit, self-collected swabs (cervico-vaginal or penile) and questionnaire data will be collected. In each study group, a subset of participants will be invited to participate in a substudy evaluating the long-term humoral immunogenicity of the HPV vaccine. Additional blood samples will be collected from participants who are part of the immunogenicity substudy. The total required sample size is 7180 individuals. The primary objectives are (1) to examine vaccine effectiveness in males and females against prevalent genital HPV infections for one, two and three doses of the HPV vaccine compared with unvaccinated participants and (2) to evaluate if there is non-inferior immunogenicity as indicated by type-specific antibody response of one dose of the HPV vaccine in 20-27-year-old females vaccinated at 9-14 years of age compared with historical data of three doses of the HPV vaccine females vaccinated at 16-26 years of age up to 12 years postvaccination.</p><p><strong>Ethics and dissemination: </strong>QUEST-ADVANCE was approved by the Research Ethics Board of the University of British Columbia/Children's and Women's Health Centre of British Columbia (H20-02111). Individual electronic informed consent or assent will be obtained from each participant before any study-specific procedures are undertaken. 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Here, we describe the protocol for QUEST-ADVANCE.</p><p><strong>Methods and analysis: </strong>QUEST-ADVANCE is an observational cohort study including males and females who are unvaccinated or vaccinated with the quadrivalent or nonavalent HPV vaccine in British Columbia, Canada. Female participants who are unvaccinated or vaccinated with 1-3 doses of the quadrivalent or nonavalent HPV vaccine at 9-14 years of age will be recruited approximately 5 or 12 years postvaccination eligibility. Male participants who are unvaccinated or vaccinated with 1 or 2 doses of the nonavalent HPV vaccine at 9-14 years of age will be recruited at approximately 5 years postvaccination eligibility. The study involves a maximum of four visits over a period of 4-5 years for female participants, and two visits over a 12-month period for male participants. At each visit, self-collected swabs (cervico-vaginal or penile) and questionnaire data will be collected. In each study group, a subset of participants will be invited to participate in a substudy evaluating the long-term humoral immunogenicity of the HPV vaccine. Additional blood samples will be collected from participants who are part of the immunogenicity substudy. The total required sample size is 7180 individuals. The primary objectives are (1) to examine vaccine effectiveness in males and females against prevalent genital HPV infections for one, two and three doses of the HPV vaccine compared with unvaccinated participants and (2) to evaluate if there is non-inferior immunogenicity as indicated by type-specific antibody response of one dose of the HPV vaccine in 20-27-year-old females vaccinated at 9-14 years of age compared with historical data of three doses of the HPV vaccine females vaccinated at 16-26 years of age up to 12 years postvaccination.</p><p><strong>Ethics and dissemination: </strong>QUEST-ADVANCE was approved by the Research Ethics Board of the University of British Columbia/Children's and Women's Health Centre of British Columbia (H20-02111). Individual electronic informed consent or assent will be obtained from each participant before any study-specific procedures are undertaken. 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Quadrivalent HPV Vaccine Evaluation Study with Addition of the Nonavalent Vaccine (QUEST-ADVANCE): protocol of an observational cohort study.
Introduction: The Quadrivalent human papillomavirus (HPV) Vaccine Evaluation Study with Addition of the Nonavalent Vaccine Study (QUEST-ADVANCE) aims to provide insight into the long-term immunogenicity and effectiveness of one, two and three HPV vaccine doses. Here, we describe the protocol for QUEST-ADVANCE.
Methods and analysis: QUEST-ADVANCE is an observational cohort study including males and females who are unvaccinated or vaccinated with the quadrivalent or nonavalent HPV vaccine in British Columbia, Canada. Female participants who are unvaccinated or vaccinated with 1-3 doses of the quadrivalent or nonavalent HPV vaccine at 9-14 years of age will be recruited approximately 5 or 12 years postvaccination eligibility. Male participants who are unvaccinated or vaccinated with 1 or 2 doses of the nonavalent HPV vaccine at 9-14 years of age will be recruited at approximately 5 years postvaccination eligibility. The study involves a maximum of four visits over a period of 4-5 years for female participants, and two visits over a 12-month period for male participants. At each visit, self-collected swabs (cervico-vaginal or penile) and questionnaire data will be collected. In each study group, a subset of participants will be invited to participate in a substudy evaluating the long-term humoral immunogenicity of the HPV vaccine. Additional blood samples will be collected from participants who are part of the immunogenicity substudy. The total required sample size is 7180 individuals. The primary objectives are (1) to examine vaccine effectiveness in males and females against prevalent genital HPV infections for one, two and three doses of the HPV vaccine compared with unvaccinated participants and (2) to evaluate if there is non-inferior immunogenicity as indicated by type-specific antibody response of one dose of the HPV vaccine in 20-27-year-old females vaccinated at 9-14 years of age compared with historical data of three doses of the HPV vaccine females vaccinated at 16-26 years of age up to 12 years postvaccination.
Ethics and dissemination: QUEST-ADVANCE was approved by the Research Ethics Board of the University of British Columbia/Children's and Women's Health Centre of British Columbia (H20-02111). Individual electronic informed consent or assent will be obtained from each participant before any study-specific procedures are undertaken. Results will be published in an international peer-reviewed journal and on the study website.
期刊介绍:
BMJ Open is an online, open access journal, dedicated to publishing medical research from all disciplines and therapeutic areas. The journal publishes all research study types, from study protocols to phase I trials to meta-analyses, including small or specialist studies. Publishing procedures are built around fully open peer review and continuous publication, publishing research online as soon as the article is ready.