Vaccine Strategies for HPV-Related Cancers: 2nd Edition

A special issue of Vaccines (ISSN 2076-393X).

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 31 December 2025 | Viewed by 45

Special Issue Editor


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Guest Editor
Departments of Family Medicine and Obstetrics & Gynecology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA
Interests: HPV associated diseases; cervical cancer; screening; prevention; vaccines
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Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccines were purposefully designed to cover HPV 16 and 18, which are associated with about 70% of cervical cancers, and about 90% of the HPV-associated head and neck and anal cancers. Enough time has elapsed to see early indicators of the reduction in cancers associated with HPV. Other types of HPV will be clinically unmasked as the natural infection types are blocked. The change in the distribution of the HPV types causing the associated cancers will be important to note so that modeling studies for future prognostic health planning can be modified. HPV vaccine administration appears to be sufficient at one dose for children 9 years of age. Increasing population coverage with a single dose offers more efficiency and equity in vaccine distribution. Understanding person-level and population-level barriers and facilitators to the original vaccine uptake is needed. Separately, the development of pan-HPV vaccines as the next-generation vaccine is imperative. Continuing to leave oncogenic HPV types out of the vaccine perpetuates HPV-associated cancer inequities.

Prof. Dr. Diane M. Harper
Guest Editor

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Keywords

  • HPV vaccine uptake
  • single dose immunization
  • clinical unmasking
  • HPV-associated cancers

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