Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Price may prohibit HPV vaccination in developing world

As vaccinations against human papillomavirus (HPV) begin for girls in another western country, this time in Scotland, questions remain about how best to utilise this technology in other world regions. As discussed at the World Cancer Congress, which was held from 27th to 31st August, in Geneva, Switzerland, the development of highly-effective vaccines against HPV and promising new screening tests provide an unprecedented opportunity to tackle the disease in poor countries, where pap smear screening has largely failed because it is too expensive and too complicated to implement.

At present, approximately 80 per cent of cervical cancer (CC) deaths occur in developing countries, and estimates predict that if current trends continue, these regions will face a 75 per cent increase in the number of cases in the next two decades. Presented at the Congress was the first broad analysis of the cost-effectiveness of introducing HPV vaccination and new screening methods into the hardest hit regions of the world, which include Asia-Pacific, Latin America and the Caribbean. The benefits varied, depending on the size and make-up of the population and the burden of CC in each country.

It was determined that in the Asia-Pacific region, which accounts for more than half of the world's CC cases, vaccination would be cost-effective, even in the poorest countries, if the cost per vaccinated girl was between US$10 and US$25. For Latin America and the Caribbean, the cost per vaccinated girl, including delivery and logistics costs, would have to be less than US$25 to be cost-effective for all countries. In the most developed populations in the region, vaccination would be cost-saving if the cost per vaccinated girl is between US$25 and US$60, and cost-effective at higher prices.

According to Professor Francesc Xavier Bosch of the Catalan Institute of Oncology: "Efforts are needed now to adapt the current price of the vaccines so they meet what individual countries can afford; the solution may be tiered pricing according to gross national income per capita and according to the scale of country effort. Currently the vaccine's price in the private sector is approximately US$120 per dose, or US$360 per vaccinated girl. Many countries will need subsidies for some time."

The price of the vaccine and the support for massive vaccination campaigns is one of the biggest barriers for the moment, but several other challenges lay ahead. Those include generating the political support for an intervention whose pay-off is two or more decades away, cultural acceptability of the vaccine and monitoring the circulating virus. Uncertainties that may affect the success of vaccination programmes include the duration of protection and whether booster shots might be needed, and whether the vaccines will be as effective in girls whose immune systems are suppressed by either malnutrition or other chronic infections, such as HIV or malaria.

For the near future, in developing countries, both vaccination and screening will be needed. However, in the beginning, many countries may have to continue to focus on screening alone until the vaccine becomes more affordable.

Matthew Dennis - Editor, Cancer Drug News

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