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Comprehensive Guide to HPV Vaccination and Immunization

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Comprehensive Guide to HPV Vaccination and Immunization

Introduction to HPV Immunization

Human Papillomavirus (HPV) is one of the most common sexually transmitted infections globally. Vaccination is the most effective method to prevent serious complications related to the virus.

Available Vaccines

  1. Gardasil 9 (9-valent)
    • Covers types 6, 11, 16, 18, 31, 33, 45, 52, 58
    • Prevents 90% of HPV-related cancers and warts
  2. Gardasil (Quadrivalent)
    • Types 6, 11, 16, 18
    • Protects against primary oncogenic types and genital warts
  3. Cervarix (Bivalent)
    • Types 16, 18
    • Focus on high-risk cancer-causing strains

Vaccination Protocols

By Age Group
• Ages 9–14: 2 doses, 6–12 months apart
• Ages 15+: 3 doses (0, 2, 6 months)
Special Cases
• Immunocompromised & HIV+ individuals: 3 doses regardless of age

Priority Groups for Vaccination

Primary Targets
• Adolescents 11–12 (optimal age)
• Youths 13–26 (catch-up)
• Immunocompromised individuals
• MSM (men who have sex with men)
• HIV-positive patients
Secondary Groups
• Adults 27–45 (case-by-case)
• Individuals with multiple partners or HPV history

 

Free Vaccination Program (from March 2024)

  • MSM, HIV-positive, immunosuppressed, transplant recipients
  • Referral by a doctor, appointment scheduling, follow-up

Clinical Effectiveness

  • 90–95% protection against cervical cancer
  • 85–90% against anal cancer
  • Significant reduction in other HPV-related cancers
  • 90% reduction in high-grade lesions (HSIL)

Safety and Monitoring

 Common Side Effects
• Injection site reactions, fever, fatigue, headache
Rare Side Effects
• Allergic reactions, fainting, dizziness

Long-Term Monitoring

  • Regular gynecological exams and Pap tests
  • For high-risk groups: frequent HPV testing and high-resolution anoscopy

Immunocompromised Vaccination Guidelines

Primary vs Secondary Immunodeficiencies
• Primary: Congenital B/T-cell or combined deficiencies
• Secondary: HIV, chemotherapy, transplant, autoimmune diseases
Scheduling
• Before or after immunosuppression therapy with timing adjustment
Modified Regimens
• Always triple-dose, monitored antibody levels

High-Risk Conditions: HIV & Transplant Patients

  • 90% of HIV+ have HPV; 50% of MSM with HIV develop precancerous lesions
  • Increased risk of persistent infection and rapid progression

Optimizing Vaccination Strategies

  • Early vaccination, combined preventive strategies, immune support, smoking cessation
  • Monitoring antibody titers, high-res anoscopy, gynecological follow-up

Contraindications & Precautions

Absolute
• Severe allergic reaction to prior dose or components
Relative
• Low CD4 count