Human Papilloma virus (HPV) are viruses that cause a common infection of the skin and genitals in men and women. Several types of HPV infection are transmitted by sexual activity and, in women, can infect the cervix (part of the uterus or womb). This infection often goes away by itself, but if it does not go away (this is called persistent infection), it can lead in women over a long period of time to cancer of the cervix. If a woman is not infected by HPV, it is very unlikely that she will get cervical cancer. This is an observer blind follow up study of the study HPV-001, which evaluated the ability of the HPV vaccine to prevent HPV infection. The current study invites all of the 1113 subjects in the HPV-001 study that received all three doses of vaccine/placebo to be enrolled and followed-up for several additional years to see if the HPV vaccine prevents HPV-16 and HPV-18 infections and to evaluate the safety of the vaccine. Subjects will remain in the same study group as in the primary study. No vaccine or placebo will be administered in this study. The Protocol Posting has been updated in order to comply with the FDA Amendment Act, Sep 2007.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
776
GSK Investigational Site
San Francisco, California, United States
GSK Investigational Site
San Francisco, California, United States
GSK Investigational Site
Augusta, Georgia, United States
GSK Investigational Site
Bardstown, Kentucky, United States
GSK Investigational Site
Louisville, Kentucky, United States
GSK Investigational Site
Lebanon, New Hampshire, United States
GSK Investigational Site
Morristown, New Jersey, United States
GSK Investigational Site
Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States
GSK Investigational Site
Portland, Oregon, United States
GSK Investigational Site
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
...and 17 more locations
Incident cervical infection with HPV-16 and/or HPV-18
Persistent cervical infection (6-month definition) with HPV 16 and/or HPV 18.
Persistent cervical infection (6-month definition) with oncogenic HPV types.
Incident cervical infection with oncogenic HPV types.
Histopathologically-confirmed CIN 1+ or CIN 2+ associated with HPV 16 and/or HPV 18 detected within the lesional component of the cervical tissue specimen.
Histopathologically-confirmed CIN 1+ or CIN 2+ associated with oncogenic HPV types detected within the lesional component of the cervical tissue specimen.
Abnormal cytology associated with an HPV-16 and/or HPV-18 cervical infection.
Abnormal cytology associated with oncogenic HPV type cervical infection.
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