{"title":"芬兰人乳头瘤病毒16和18感染引起的年度疾病负担。","authors":"Kari J Syrjänen","doi":"10.3109/00365540903331985","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Apart from cancers of the lower female genital tract, human papillomaviruses (HPV) are associated with a large number of benign, premalignant and malignant lesions at different anatomic sites in both genders. Malignant tumours and their precursors are usually attributed to the oncogenic (high-risk, HR) HPV types, whereas benign lesions (mostly papillomas) are ascribed to the low-risk (LR) HPV types, most notably HPV6 and HPV11. To date, the main interest has been focused on HR-HPV types and their associated pathology, and much less attention has been paid to the lesions caused by the LR-HPV types. The recent licensing of an effective prophylactic vaccine against the 2 most important LR-HPV types (HPV6 and HPV11) has resulted in considerably increased interest in these LR-HPV types as well. This author recently conducted a systematic survey of the annual disease burden due to HPV6/11 infections in Finland. As a rational continuation, the present survey was conducted to estimate the annual disease burden due to HPV16 and HPV18 infections in our country. Together, these 2 documents form the foundation for calculations of the annual costs needed to treat the diseases caused by these 2 most common LR and HR HPV types. Similar to HPV6/11, accurate estimates of disease burden are also mandatory for all modelling of the cost-effectiveness of prophylactic HPV16/18 vaccines. In the first step, the published HPV literature was used to create a list of benign, premalignant and malignant lesions associated with this virus at different anatomic sites. The GLOBOCAN 2004 (IARC; International Agency for Research on Cancer) database was used to derive the global numbers of incident cases for each of these malignancies in 2002, and the Finnish Cancer Registry (FCR) website was used to obtain these numbers for Finland (y 2005). The evidence linking HPV to each individual tumour category was classified as: (1) established, (2) emerging, and (3) controversial. All published evidence was weighted for each individual malignant, premalignant and benign lesion, anatomic region-by-region, while assessing the attributable fraction of HPV16/18 genotypes in each lesion. Because benign and most of the precancer lesions are not registered by the FCR or GLOBOCAN, different approaches had to be used to derive the estimates for their incidence, based on published literature or other registries. In cases with no reasonable consensus, a lower and an upper boundary was set for the range of these estimates. Where well established, the different incidence rates among males and females were used to calculate the numbers of incident cases by gender. The present survey implicates that a minimum of 7859 to 8316 new cases of HPV16- or HPV18-associated clinical lesions would be detected each y in Finland, if all were registered. In other words, these numbers represent the annual disease burden due to these 2 most common HR-HPV genotypes. In the Finnish population, these lower and upper limits translate to the crude annual incidence rates of 147/100,000 and 156/100,000, respectively. When adjusted for the European Standard Population, the respective age-adjusted incidence rates are 137/100,000 and 145/100,000. As compared with the annual disease burden of HPV6/11 in this country (12,666-13,066 new cases), these numbers for HPV16/18 are significantly smaller. Another major difference between HPV6/11 and HPV16/18 is that the disease burden due to the former is much more evenly distributed among the genders, with only a slight female preponderance (approximately 7500 vs 5500 cases). This is in sharp contrast to HPV16/18 disease burden, of which by far the major proportion is contributed by females (approximately 7000 vs 1300 cases). Of note, these clinical lesions counted in this report for HPV16/18 only represent a small minority of the total viral burden due to the infections by these 2 HR-HPV genotypes. This is because the vast majority of these HR-HPV infections are transient and spontaneously resolve within a few months, without ever developing a clinical disease. However, this spontaneous clearance does not make these latent infections less important, because as long as the virus reservoir exists, it serves as the source of viral transmission to susceptible individuals, with a multitude of HPV16/18-associated pathologies as a potential outcome. The implications of these data in the era of effective prophylactic HPV vaccination should be straightforward. However, the 2 impending challenges for designers of future HPV vaccines and vaccination programmes are: (1) the marked imbalance of HPV16/18 disease burden between the genders, and (2) the fact that HPV6/11 annual disease burden far exceeds that of HPV16/18 and it is also more evenly contributed by both genders.</p>","PeriodicalId":76520,"journal":{"name":"Scandinavian journal of infectious diseases. Supplementum","volume":"108 ","pages":"2-32"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2009-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.3109/00365540903331985","citationCount":"15","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Annual disease burden due to human papillomavirus 16 and 18 infections in Finland.\",\"authors\":\"Kari J Syrjänen\",\"doi\":\"10.3109/00365540903331985\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Apart from cancers of the lower female genital tract, human papillomaviruses (HPV) are associated with a large number of benign, premalignant and malignant lesions at different anatomic sites in both genders. Malignant tumours and their precursors are usually attributed to the oncogenic (high-risk, HR) HPV types, whereas benign lesions (mostly papillomas) are ascribed to the low-risk (LR) HPV types, most notably HPV6 and HPV11. To date, the main interest has been focused on HR-HPV types and their associated pathology, and much less attention has been paid to the lesions caused by the LR-HPV types. The recent licensing of an effective prophylactic vaccine against the 2 most important LR-HPV types (HPV6 and HPV11) has resulted in considerably increased interest in these LR-HPV types as well. This author recently conducted a systematic survey of the annual disease burden due to HPV6/11 infections in Finland. As a rational continuation, the present survey was conducted to estimate the annual disease burden due to HPV16 and HPV18 infections in our country. Together, these 2 documents form the foundation for calculations of the annual costs needed to treat the diseases caused by these 2 most common LR and HR HPV types. Similar to HPV6/11, accurate estimates of disease burden are also mandatory for all modelling of the cost-effectiveness of prophylactic HPV16/18 vaccines. In the first step, the published HPV literature was used to create a list of benign, premalignant and malignant lesions associated with this virus at different anatomic sites. The GLOBOCAN 2004 (IARC; International Agency for Research on Cancer) database was used to derive the global numbers of incident cases for each of these malignancies in 2002, and the Finnish Cancer Registry (FCR) website was used to obtain these numbers for Finland (y 2005). The evidence linking HPV to each individual tumour category was classified as: (1) established, (2) emerging, and (3) controversial. All published evidence was weighted for each individual malignant, premalignant and benign lesion, anatomic region-by-region, while assessing the attributable fraction of HPV16/18 genotypes in each lesion. Because benign and most of the precancer lesions are not registered by the FCR or GLOBOCAN, different approaches had to be used to derive the estimates for their incidence, based on published literature or other registries. In cases with no reasonable consensus, a lower and an upper boundary was set for the range of these estimates. Where well established, the different incidence rates among males and females were used to calculate the numbers of incident cases by gender. The present survey implicates that a minimum of 7859 to 8316 new cases of HPV16- or HPV18-associated clinical lesions would be detected each y in Finland, if all were registered. In other words, these numbers represent the annual disease burden due to these 2 most common HR-HPV genotypes. In the Finnish population, these lower and upper limits translate to the crude annual incidence rates of 147/100,000 and 156/100,000, respectively. When adjusted for the European Standard Population, the respective age-adjusted incidence rates are 137/100,000 and 145/100,000. As compared with the annual disease burden of HPV6/11 in this country (12,666-13,066 new cases), these numbers for HPV16/18 are significantly smaller. Another major difference between HPV6/11 and HPV16/18 is that the disease burden due to the former is much more evenly distributed among the genders, with only a slight female preponderance (approximately 7500 vs 5500 cases). This is in sharp contrast to HPV16/18 disease burden, of which by far the major proportion is contributed by females (approximately 7000 vs 1300 cases). Of note, these clinical lesions counted in this report for HPV16/18 only represent a small minority of the total viral burden due to the infections by these 2 HR-HPV genotypes. This is because the vast majority of these HR-HPV infections are transient and spontaneously resolve within a few months, without ever developing a clinical disease. However, this spontaneous clearance does not make these latent infections less important, because as long as the virus reservoir exists, it serves as the source of viral transmission to susceptible individuals, with a multitude of HPV16/18-associated pathologies as a potential outcome. The implications of these data in the era of effective prophylactic HPV vaccination should be straightforward. However, the 2 impending challenges for designers of future HPV vaccines and vaccination programmes are: (1) the marked imbalance of HPV16/18 disease burden between the genders, and (2) the fact that HPV6/11 annual disease burden far exceeds that of HPV16/18 and it is also more evenly contributed by both genders.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":76520,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Scandinavian journal of infectious diseases. 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引用次数: 15
摘要
除了女性下生殖道的癌症外,人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)还与两性不同解剖部位的大量良性、癌前和恶性病变有关。恶性肿瘤及其前体通常归因于致瘤性(高风险,HR) HPV型,而良性病变(主要是乳头状瘤)归因于低风险(LR) HPV型,最明显的是HPV6和HPV11。迄今为止,主要的兴趣集中在HR-HPV类型及其相关病理上,而对LR-HPV类型引起的病变的关注要少得多。最近,针对两种最重要的低级别hpv类型(HPV6和HPV11)的有效预防性疫苗获得许可,这也大大增加了人们对这些低级别hpv类型的兴趣。本文作者最近在芬兰进行了一项由HPV6/11感染引起的年度疾病负担的系统调查。作为合理的延续,本调查旨在估计我国因HPV16和HPV18感染而造成的年度疾病负担。这两份文件共同构成了计算治疗这两种最常见的LR型和HR型HPV引起的疾病所需的年度费用的基础。与HPV6/11类似,对预防性HPV16/18疫苗的成本效益进行所有建模时,也必须准确估计疾病负担。第一步,使用已发表的HPV文献在不同解剖部位创建与该病毒相关的良性、癌前和恶性病变列表。GLOBOCAN 2004 (IARC;利用国际癌症研究机构(International Agency for Research on Cancer)的数据库得出2002年每种恶性肿瘤的全球病例数,并利用芬兰癌症登记处(FCR)网站获得芬兰的这些数字(2005年)。将HPV与每个肿瘤类别联系起来的证据分为:(1)已建立的,(2)新出现的,和(3)有争议的。在评估HPV16/18基因型在每个病变中的归因比例的同时,对每个恶性、癌前和良性病变的解剖区域进行加权。由于良性和大多数癌前病变未被FCR或GLOBOCAN登记,因此必须使用不同的方法来根据已发表的文献或其他登记来得出其发生率的估计。在没有达成合理共识的情况下,为这些估计的范围设定了一个下限和一个上限。在确定的情况下,使用男性和女性之间的不同发病率来计算按性别划分的事件病例数。目前的调查表明,芬兰每年至少会发现7859至8316例HPV16或hpv18相关临床病变的新病例,如果所有病例都登记在案的话。换句话说,这些数字代表了由这两种最常见的HR-HPV基因型引起的年度疾病负担。在芬兰人口中,这些下限和上限转化为粗年发病率分别为147/100,000和156/100,000。根据欧洲标准人口进行调整后,年龄调整后的发病率分别为137/100,000和145/100,000。与该国HPV6/11的年度疾病负担(12,666-13,066新病例)相比,HPV16/18的这些数字要小得多。HPV6/11和HPV16/18之间的另一个主要区别是,前者造成的疾病负担在性别之间的分布更为均匀,只有轻微的女性优势(约7500例对5500例)。这与HPV16/18的疾病负担形成鲜明对比,到目前为止,HPV16/18的主要比例是由女性造成的(大约7000例对1300例)。值得注意的是,本报告中统计的HPV16/18的临床病变仅占这两种HR-HPV基因型感染引起的总病毒负担的一小部分。这是因为这些HR-HPV感染绝大多数是短暂的,并在几个月内自行消退,而不会发展为临床疾病。然而,这种自发清除并不会降低这些潜伏感染的重要性,因为只要病毒库存在,它就会成为病毒传播给易感个体的来源,从而导致大量hpv16 /18相关病理。在有效预防性HPV疫苗接种时代,这些数据的含义应该是直截了当的。然而,未来HPV疫苗和疫苗接种规划的设计者面临两个迫在眉睫的挑战:(1)HPV16/18疾病负担在性别之间的明显不平衡;(2)HPV6/11年度疾病负担远远超过HPV16/18,而且男女之间的贡献更加均匀。
Annual disease burden due to human papillomavirus 16 and 18 infections in Finland.
Apart from cancers of the lower female genital tract, human papillomaviruses (HPV) are associated with a large number of benign, premalignant and malignant lesions at different anatomic sites in both genders. Malignant tumours and their precursors are usually attributed to the oncogenic (high-risk, HR) HPV types, whereas benign lesions (mostly papillomas) are ascribed to the low-risk (LR) HPV types, most notably HPV6 and HPV11. To date, the main interest has been focused on HR-HPV types and their associated pathology, and much less attention has been paid to the lesions caused by the LR-HPV types. The recent licensing of an effective prophylactic vaccine against the 2 most important LR-HPV types (HPV6 and HPV11) has resulted in considerably increased interest in these LR-HPV types as well. This author recently conducted a systematic survey of the annual disease burden due to HPV6/11 infections in Finland. As a rational continuation, the present survey was conducted to estimate the annual disease burden due to HPV16 and HPV18 infections in our country. Together, these 2 documents form the foundation for calculations of the annual costs needed to treat the diseases caused by these 2 most common LR and HR HPV types. Similar to HPV6/11, accurate estimates of disease burden are also mandatory for all modelling of the cost-effectiveness of prophylactic HPV16/18 vaccines. In the first step, the published HPV literature was used to create a list of benign, premalignant and malignant lesions associated with this virus at different anatomic sites. The GLOBOCAN 2004 (IARC; International Agency for Research on Cancer) database was used to derive the global numbers of incident cases for each of these malignancies in 2002, and the Finnish Cancer Registry (FCR) website was used to obtain these numbers for Finland (y 2005). The evidence linking HPV to each individual tumour category was classified as: (1) established, (2) emerging, and (3) controversial. All published evidence was weighted for each individual malignant, premalignant and benign lesion, anatomic region-by-region, while assessing the attributable fraction of HPV16/18 genotypes in each lesion. Because benign and most of the precancer lesions are not registered by the FCR or GLOBOCAN, different approaches had to be used to derive the estimates for their incidence, based on published literature or other registries. In cases with no reasonable consensus, a lower and an upper boundary was set for the range of these estimates. Where well established, the different incidence rates among males and females were used to calculate the numbers of incident cases by gender. The present survey implicates that a minimum of 7859 to 8316 new cases of HPV16- or HPV18-associated clinical lesions would be detected each y in Finland, if all were registered. In other words, these numbers represent the annual disease burden due to these 2 most common HR-HPV genotypes. In the Finnish population, these lower and upper limits translate to the crude annual incidence rates of 147/100,000 and 156/100,000, respectively. When adjusted for the European Standard Population, the respective age-adjusted incidence rates are 137/100,000 and 145/100,000. As compared with the annual disease burden of HPV6/11 in this country (12,666-13,066 new cases), these numbers for HPV16/18 are significantly smaller. Another major difference between HPV6/11 and HPV16/18 is that the disease burden due to the former is much more evenly distributed among the genders, with only a slight female preponderance (approximately 7500 vs 5500 cases). This is in sharp contrast to HPV16/18 disease burden, of which by far the major proportion is contributed by females (approximately 7000 vs 1300 cases). Of note, these clinical lesions counted in this report for HPV16/18 only represent a small minority of the total viral burden due to the infections by these 2 HR-HPV genotypes. This is because the vast majority of these HR-HPV infections are transient and spontaneously resolve within a few months, without ever developing a clinical disease. However, this spontaneous clearance does not make these latent infections less important, because as long as the virus reservoir exists, it serves as the source of viral transmission to susceptible individuals, with a multitude of HPV16/18-associated pathologies as a potential outcome. The implications of these data in the era of effective prophylactic HPV vaccination should be straightforward. However, the 2 impending challenges for designers of future HPV vaccines and vaccination programmes are: (1) the marked imbalance of HPV16/18 disease burden between the genders, and (2) the fact that HPV6/11 annual disease burden far exceeds that of HPV16/18 and it is also more evenly contributed by both genders.