Human Papillomavirus-Related Cancer Prevention Among People Experiencing Housing Instability: A Systematic Review.

IF 1.7 4区 医学 Q3 INFECTIOUS DISEASES Sexually transmitted diseases Pub Date : 2025-07-01 Epub Date: 2025-03-14 DOI:10.1097/OLQ.0000000000002159
Annalynn M Galvin, Idara N Akpan, Ashvita Garg, Paula M Cuccaro, Erika L Thompson, Diane M Santa Maria
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Abstract

Background: Human papillomavirus (HPV)-related cancer is highly preventable through HPV vaccination and cancer screening, but people experiencing homelessness or housing instability (PEH) may not engage in these behaviors due to conflicting priorities. This systematic review synthesized and estimated HPV-related cancer prevention behaviors among PEH.

Methods: Using PRISMA guidelines, articles published before 2023 were located via PubMed, Ovid/Medline, CINAHL, and Embase. Full-text, peer-reviewed studies that measured HPV-related cancer prevention in any sample of people experiencing homelessness were included. Two researchers abstracted data independently, with high interrater reliability (>90%). Results were narratively summarized with consensus, and proportions were compared using preventive behavior.

Results: After reviewing 405 articles, we included 18 articles from the United States from 1998 to 2022. There were 6674 people (e.g., women, youth, men who have sex with men) experiencing homelessness assessed for HPV-related cancer prevention behaviors. Pooled prevalence was approximately 59.8% (±6%) for cervical cancer screening in the last 3 years and 42.9% (±4.7%) for HPV vaccination initiation. Other factors related to housing instability and HPV-related cancer prevention included gender, sexual trauma, and procedural pain, with mixed results for housing status and HPV knowledge.

Conclusions: Findings demonstrate the varied adherence to HPV-related cancer prevention, with rates consistently below recommended World Health Organization guidelines. Future studies should adjust for specific risk factors in modeling that may be associated with or modified by the effects of homelessness and evaluate upstream prevention (e.g., vaccination) and other types of HPV-related cancer (e.g., anal cancer).

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住房不稳定人群中与 HPV 相关的癌症预防:系统综述。
背景:通过接种 HPV 疫苗和癌症筛查,HPV 相关癌症极易预防,但无家可归或住房不稳定人群(PEH)可能因优先事项冲突而不会采取这些行为。本系统性综述综合并估算了 PEH 中与 HPV 相关的癌症预防行为:采用 PRISMA 指南,通过 PubMed、Ovid/Medline、CINAHL 和 Embase 查找 2023 年之前发表的文章。纳入了在任何无家可归者样本中测量 HPV 相关癌症预防情况的同行评审全文研究。两名研究人员独立摘录数据,相互之间的可靠性很高(>90%)。在达成共识的基础上对结果进行了叙述性总结,并使用预防行为对比例进行了比较:在查阅了 405 篇文章后,我们收录了 1998-2022 年间来自美国的 18 篇文章。共有 6674 名无家可归者(如女性、青少年、男男性行为者)接受了 HPV 相关癌症预防行为的评估。最近 3 年宫颈癌筛查的汇总流行率约为 59.8%(±6%),开始接种 HPV 疫苗的流行率约为 42.9%(±4.7%)。与住房不稳定性和HPV相关癌症预防有关的其他因素包括性别、性创伤和手术疼痛,住房状况和HPV知识方面的结果不一:研究结果表明,HPV相关癌症预防的依从性各不相同,其比例始终低于世界卫生组织的建议准则。未来的研究应调整模型中可能与无家可归有关或受无家可归影响而改变的特定风险因素,并评估上游预防(如疫苗接种)和其他类型的 HPV 相关癌症(如肛门癌)。
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来源期刊
Sexually transmitted diseases
Sexually transmitted diseases 医学-传染病学
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
16.10%
发文量
289
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: ​Sexually Transmitted Diseases, the official journal of the American Sexually Transmitted Diseases Association​, publishes peer-reviewed, original articles on clinical, laboratory, immunologic, epidemiologic, behavioral, public health, and historical topics pertaining to sexually transmitted diseases and related fields. Reports from the CDC and NIH provide up-to-the-minute information. A highly respected editorial board is composed of prominent scientists who are leaders in this rapidly changing field. Included in each issue are studies and developments from around the world.
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