It is recommended to get pregnant six months after the quadrivalent vaccine has been administered.
Quadrivalent cervical cancer vaccine has the effect of preventing the infection of the corresponding subtypes of HPV and reducing the rate of HPV infection, which can reduce the probability of pre-cancerous cervical lesions and even cervical cancer. The cervical cancer vaccine is not a virus, but only a protein fragment. Theoretically, the cervical cancer vaccine has little effect on pregnancy.
The quadrivalent vaccine needs to be injected three times within six months. If you become pregnant within six months of the injection, you can stop the vaccination, continue the pregnancy, and resume the injection when the delivery is completed.
However, some women may have adverse reactions after vaccination, such as headache, fever, allergy, etc. In order to avoid affecting the health of the fetus due to physical discomfort and to alleviate the psychological pressure of women who are worried about unfavorable effects on the fetus after vaccination, it will be recommended that women become pregnant six months after the completion of vaccination.