August 18, 2015
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Gardasil 9 safe, effective when taken with other routine vaccines

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Simultaneous administration of Gardasil 9-valent HPV vaccine with Menactra and Adacel vaccines was safe and well-tolerated in boys and girls, according to a recent study.

“Concomitant administration of [Gardasil 9-valent HPV vaccine, Merck (9vHPV)] and [Menactra meningococcal vaccine, Sanofi Pasteur (MenACWY‐D)] and [Adacel, Sanofi Pasteur (Tdap)] was generally well-tolerated and the immune responses to components of either vaccine were noninferior compared with nonconcomitant administration,” Andrea Schilling, MD, of the Clinica Alemana-Universidad del Desarrollo, Chile, and colleagues wrote. “Concomitant administration would minimize the number of visits required to deliver each vaccine individually and therefore facilitate adherence to recommended vaccination regimens.”

The researchers compiled a cohort of 1,241 boys and girls aged 11 to 15 years. The cohort was split into a nonconcomitant group that received 9vHPV (n = 621), and a concomitant group that received Tdap and MenACWY‐D in conjunction with 9vHPV (n = 620). In the concomitant group, HPV vaccines were administered in three doses at day 1, month 2 and month 6, with Tdap and MenACWY‐D given on day 1. The nonconcomitant group received Tdap and MenACWY‐D during a separate visit at month 1.

The researchers wrote that when 9vHPV was administered concomitantly, immune responses are equally as strong as when it is administered nonconcomitantly. Likewise, study results found that when Tdap and MenACWY‐D were administered concomitantly, antibody responses were essentially the same as when the vaccines were administered separately.

The only reported adverse reaction associated with concomitant administration of 9vHPV was injection site swelling, which ranged from mild to moderate. The researchers did not record any severe adverse events associated with concomitant administration of 9vHPV.

“Providing vaccinations to adolescents is challenging because they make infrequent health care visits,” Schilling and colleagues wrote. “It is estimated that coadministration of HPV vaccine with other vaccines such as diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, meningococcal conjugate, and influenza vaccines could increase coverage for the first dose of HPV vaccine to more than 90 percent.”– by David Costill

Disclosure: Schilling reports receiving research support for this clinical study and other HPV vaccine-related studies from Merck and honoraria outside the submitted work from Merck-Chile, Grunenthal-Chile and Grunenthal-L.A. Please see the full study for a list of all other authors’ relevant financial disclosures.