A brief history of economic evaluation for human papillomavirus vaccination policy
- 1 January 2010
- journal article
- review article
- Published by CSIRO Publishing in Sexual Health
- Vol. 7 (3), 352-358
- https://doi.org/10.1071/sh10018
Abstract
Background: This commentary discusses key issues for health economic evaluation and modelling, applied to human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine programs. Methods: We outline some of the specific features of HPV disease and vaccination, and associated policy questions in light of a literature search for economic evaluations on HPV vaccination. Results: We observe that some policy questions could not be reliably addressed by many of the 43 published economic evaluations we found. Despite this, policy making on universal HPV vaccination followed shortly after vaccine licensure in many developed countries, so the role economic evaluation played in informing these decisions (pre-dating 2008) seems to have been fairly limited. For more recent decisions, however, economic evaluation is likely to have been used more widely and more intensively. Conclusions: We expect future cost-effectiveness analyses to be more instrumental in policy making regarding vaccines covering more HPV types, therapeutic HPV vaccines, and novel diagnostic tests for biomarkers of HPV infection and disease integrated with cervical screening programs.Keywords
This publication has 77 references indexed in Scilit:
- WHO Guide for standardisation of economic evaluations of immunization programmesVaccine, 2010
- The potential cost-effectiveness of adding a human papillomavirus vaccine to the cervical cancer screening programme in South AfricaVaccine, 2009
- Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of a Quadrivalent Human Papilloma Virus Vaccine in MexicoArchives of Medical Research, 2009
- A review of human carcinogens—Part B: biological agentsThe Lancet Oncology, 2009
- Papillomaviruses in the causation of human cancers — a brief historical accountVirology, 2009
- Cost-effectiveness of human papillomavirus vaccine in reducing the risk of cervical cancer in Ireland due to HPV types 16 and 18 using a transmission dynamic modelVaccine, 2008
- Overview of Human Papillomavirus-Based and Other Novel Options for Cervical Cancer Screening in Developed and Developing CountriesVaccine, 2008
- Health and economic outcomes of HPV 16,18 vaccination in 72 GAVI-eligible countriesVaccine, 2008
- Health and economic impact of HPV 16 and 18 vaccination and cervical cancer screening in IndiaBritish Journal of Cancer, 2008
- The global health burden of infection‐associated cancers in the year 2002International Journal of Cancer, 2006