Dayton Daily News

HPV vaccine given OK for older people

- By Laurie McGinley Washington Post

WASHINGTON — The Food and Drug Administra­tion expanded its approval of the HPV vaccine to include men and women between 27 and 45, an effort to protect more people from several types of cancer caused by the human papillomav­irus.

The vaccine, called Gardasil 9, previously was approved for people ages 9 through 26. The vaccine is typically given in two doses several months apart for those who are 9 through 14, and in three doses for individual­s 15 through 26. For those older than 26, the recommende­d regimen will be three doses.

Most sexually active individual­s in the United States will become infected by HPV sometime in their lifetimes. In most cases, the virus is cleared by the body’s immune system, but when that doesn’t occur, HPV infections can lead to cervical, anal, vaginal, penile and throat cancers.

The approval “represents an important opportunit­y to help prevent HPV-related diseases and cancers in a broader age range,” said Peter Marks, director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research.

Experts say the vaccine, which protects against nine different HPV strains, is most effective when administer­ed before the initiation of sexual activity. But data also indicate that the vaccine can benefit the older group. That’s because even though many adults have been exposed to some types of HPV, most have not been exposed to all nine types covered by the vaccine.

Merck, which manufactur­ers the vaccine, requested the expanded age range this year. In June, the FDA granted the applicatio­n priority review.

The original version of the vaccine, called simply Gardasil, was approved by the FDA in 2006 and covered four strains of HPV; it is no longer available in the United States. Gardasil 9 was approved in 2014. The two versions are manufactur­ed similarly and cover four of the same HPV types.

The agency said it based its expanded age approval on data on the original Gardasil vaccine involving 3,200 women ages 27 through 45. The data, and long-term follow-up, showed that Gardasil was effective in preventing persistent infection, genital warts, various precancero­us lesions and cancers related to HPV types covered by the vaccine. The FDA said effectiven­ess for men was inferred based on the data for women, a small trial for men ages 27 through 45 and the experience of younger males.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on Practices, which is made up of medical and public health experts, is expected to review the expanded age range at its meeting later this month and to vote on it next year. If the CDC committee recommends that the older group receive the vaccine, insurance companies are much more likely to cover the cost.

 ?? JOHN J. KIM / CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Federal data for 2017 shows HPV vaccinatio­n rates are increasing but so are HPV-related cancers, with more than 43,000 cases in 2015.
JOHN J. KIM / CHICAGO TRIBUNE Federal data for 2017 shows HPV vaccinatio­n rates are increasing but so are HPV-related cancers, with more than 43,000 cases in 2015.

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