•연구자: 수학과 심은하
•발표일: 2026.01.12
•DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/13696998.2025.2609508
•Minjin Kim and Eunha Shim, Journal of Medical Economics (Q1); Volume 29, Issue 1, Pages 155-168 (2026)
•Abstract
Aims
This study evaluated the cost-effectiveness of female-only vaccination (FOV) and gender-neutral vaccination strategies (GNV) using 4-valent (4vHPV) and 9-valent HPV (9vHPV) vaccines among adolescents aged 12–16 years in Japan. It provides the first comprehensive assessment of all feasible vaccine–population combinations using a unified dynamic transmission model.
Materials and methods
An age- and sex-structured dynamic transmission model simulated HPV transmission and disease progression over 100 years, incorporating cervical, vulvar, vaginal, anal, head and neck, and penile cancers. Six vaccination strategies were evaluated: no further vaccination, FOV with 4vHPV, FOV with 9vHPV, GNV with 9vHPV for females and 4vHPV for males, GNV with 4vHPV for both sexes, and GNV with 9vHPV for both sexes. Analyses adopted a healthcare payer perspective, with costs in 2025 Japanese yen, discounted at 3%. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) were calculated using a willingness-to-pay threshold of ¥5 million per quality-adjusted life year (QALY).
Results
FOV with 4vHPV yielded an ICER of ¥171,725/QALY versus no vaccination, and FOV with 9vHPV yielded ¥1,366,226/QALY versus FOV with 4vHPV – both below the willingness-to-pay threshold. Furthermore, GNV with 9vHPV for both sexes provided the greatest health gains and remained below the threshold (¥3,594,296/QALY) versus FOV with 9vHPV. GNV with 4vHPV and mixed 9vHPV/4vHPV schedules were dominated and excluded.
Limitations
The healthcare payer perspective excludes indirect costs. The model hypothetically includes 9vHPV for boys despite its unavailability for males in Japan.
Conclusions
Both female-only 4vHPV and 9vHPV strategies are cost-effective under Japan’s economic standards. Furthermore, GNV with 9vHPV provides greater health benefits and cost-effectiveness.