The impact of vaccination and coinfectionon HPV and cervical cancer (Q841326): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 23:47, 19 March 2024

scientific article
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The impact of vaccination and coinfectionon HPV and cervical cancer
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    The impact of vaccination and coinfectionon HPV and cervical cancer (English)
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    16 September 2009
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    Understanding the relationship between coinfection with multiple strains of human papillomavirus and cervical cancer may play a key role in vaccination strategies for the virus. In this article we formulate a model with two strains of infection and vaccination for one of the strains (strain 1, oncogenic) in order to investigate how multiple strains of HPV and vaccination may affect the number of cervical cancer cases and deaths due to infections with both types of HPV. We calculate the basic reproductive number \(R_i\) for both strains independently as well as the basic reproductive number for the system based on \(R_1\) and \(R_2\). We also compute the invasion reproductive number \(\widetilde R _{i}\) for the strain \(i\) when the strain \(j\) is at endemic equilibrium (\(i\neq j\)). We show that the disease-free equilibrium is locally stable when \(R_0 = \max\{R_1,R_2\}1\). We determine stability of the single strain equilibria using the invasion reproductive numbers. The \(R_1,R_2\) parameter space is partitioned into 4 regions by the curves \(R_1=1, R_2=1,\widetilde R _{1} = 1\), and \(\widetilde R _{2} = 1\). In each region a different equilibrium is dominant. The presence of strain 2 can increase the strain 1 related cancer deaths by more than 100 percent, but strain 2 prevalence can be reduced by more than 90 percent with 50 percent vaccination coverage. Under certain conditions, we show that vaccination against strain 1 can actually eradicate strain 2.
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    human papillomavirus (HPV)
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    vaccination
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    coinfection
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    invasion reproductive number
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