CONTACT: Doug Carlson
(850) 645-1255
doug.carlson@med.fsu.edu
By Doug Carlson
June 2009STUDY: BENEFIT TO WOMEN NOT ENOUGH TO
SWAY MEN TO GET HPV VACCINE
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- Informing men that a new vaccine to prevent
human papillomavirus (HPV) would also help protect their female
partners against developing cervical cancer from the sexually
transmitted infection did not increase their interest in getting the
vaccine, according to a new Florida State University study.
Mary Gerend, assistant professor of medical humanities and social
sciences at the FSU College of Medicine, and Jessica Barley, a 2008
Florida State psychology graduate who based her honors thesis on the
study, found that men are no more likely to want the vaccination
just because they can help protect their female sexual partners. An
HPV vaccine for women has been available since 2006, and a vaccine
for men is likely to be approved in the near future.
“You can probably interpret this finding in a number of ways,”
Gerend said. “Thinking about the benefit to their own health --
protection again rare genital cancers and genital warts -- is all
men really need to know; telling them all that extra stuff really
isn’t going to push them one way or another.”
For maximum benefit to public health, both men and women should be
vaccinated but little was known about men’s interest in the vaccine
before Gerend’s study, which was published in the journal Sexually
Transmitted Diseases. Gerend presented the findings recently at the
annual meeting of the Society of Behavioral Medicine in Montreal.
HPV is the most common sexually transmitted infection, according to
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which
estimates that approximately 20 million Americans are currently
infected with HPV and that another 6.2 million people become newly
infected each year. HPV-related cancers are very rare in men, but
last year the American Cancer Society estimated that nearly 20,000
women would be diagnosed with cervical and other cancers caused by
HPV in 2008.
Gerend’s research team randomly divided 356 male college students
into groups and gave one group a self-protection message that
focused on the benefits of HPV vaccination for men and the other a
partner-protection message that focused on the benefits of HPV
vaccination for men and their female partners.
Men were asked to rate, on a scale of 1 to 6, the likelihood that
they would get the vaccine, with 1 equaling “very unlikely” and 6
equaling “very likely.” There was little difference between the
groups, with both expressing only moderate interest in getting the
vaccine. Those who received the self-protection message had a mean
response of 3.9 on the 6-point scale, while the mean response from
the group who got the partner-protection message was 3.8.
Moreover, men who identified themselves as being in a committed
relationship also did not indicate a higher degree of interest in
the vaccination.
“Now, we have to remember that these were 18-, 19-, 20-year-old male
college students, so we have to keep that in mind when considering
their idea of a committed relationship,” Gerend said. “And if we did
this study again, I’d really want to make sure we drilled home the
message of the seriousness of HPV for women. I think they got that
message, but it might not have been strong enough.”
The key point in encouraging women to receive the vaccine is the
message about how it reduces their risk of developing cervical
cancer. The results of Gerend’s study have important implications
for how the vaccine for men will be marketed for public acceptance
when it becomes available. Efficacy trials in men are ongoing, and
the Food and Drug Administration is expected to approve it for use
in men as early as this year.
In the meantime, Gerend is working on another study funded by the
National Cancer Institute to gauge the best message for encouraging
young women to receive the HPV vaccination. The most recent
estimates from the CDC, based on 2007 data, suggest that acceptance
rates for the HPV vaccine remain low -- about 1 in 4 for girls ages
13 to 17 and about 1 in 10 for women in the 18 to 26 age group.
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