Public Health Computational and Operations Research, School of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2010 Dec 14;4(12):e916. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0000916.
Chagas disease, caused by the parasite Trypanosoma cruzi (T. cruzi), is the leading etiology of non-ischemic heart disease worldwide, with Latin America bearing the majority of the burden. This substantial burden and the limitations of current interventions have motivated efforts to develop a vaccine against T. cruzi.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We constructed a decision analytic Markov computer simulation model to assess the potential economic value of a T. cruzi vaccine in Latin America from the societal perspective. Each simulation run calculated the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER), or the cost per disability-adjusted life year (DALY) avoided, of vaccination. Sensitivity analyses evaluated the impact of varying key model parameters such as vaccine cost (range: $0.50-$200), vaccine efficacy (range: 25%-75%), the cost of acute-phase drug treatment (range: $10-$150 to account for variations in acute-phase treatment regimens), and risk of infection (range: 1%-20%). Additional analyses determined the incremental cost of vaccinating an individual and the cost per averted congestive heart failure case. Vaccination was considered highly cost-effective when the ICER was ≤1 times the GDP/capita, still cost-effective when the ICER was between 1 and 3 times the GDP/capita, and not cost-effective when the ICER was >3 times the GDP/capita. Our results showed vaccination to be very cost-effective and often economically dominant (i.e., saving costs as well providing health benefits) for a wide range of scenarios, e.g., even when risk of infection was as low as 1% and vaccine efficacy was as low as 25%. Vaccinating an individual could likely provide net cost savings that rise substantially as risk of infection or vaccine efficacy increase.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Results indicate that a T. cruzi vaccine could provide substantial economic benefit, depending on the cost of the vaccine, and support continued efforts to develop a human vaccine.
恰加斯病是由寄生虫克氏锥虫(Trypanosoma cruzi,T. cruzi)引起的,是全球非缺血性心脏病的主要病因,其中拉丁美洲的负担最重。这种巨大的负担和当前干预措施的局限性促使人们努力开发一种针对 T. cruzi 的疫苗。
方法/主要发现:我们构建了一个决策分析马尔可夫计算机模拟模型,从社会角度评估拉丁美洲 T. cruzi 疫苗的潜在经济价值。每次模拟运行计算疫苗接种的增量成本效益比(ICER),即每避免一个残疾调整生命年(DALY)的成本。敏感性分析评估了关键模型参数(如疫苗成本(范围:$0.50-200)、疫苗效力(范围:25%-75%)、急性期药物治疗成本(范围:$10-150,以反映急性期治疗方案的变化)和感染风险(范围:1%-20%)的变化对结果的影响。额外的分析确定了为个体接种疫苗的增量成本和每例充血性心力衰竭病例的预防成本。当 ICER 小于或等于人均 GDP 的 1 倍时,接种疫苗被认为是高度符合成本效益的;当 ICER 在人均 GDP 的 1 至 3 倍之间时,接种疫苗仍然是符合成本效益的;当 ICER 大于人均 GDP 的 3 倍时,接种疫苗则不符合成本效益。我们的结果表明,在广泛的情况下,接种疫苗具有很高的成本效益,并且在经济上往往具有优势(即节省成本并提供健康效益),例如,即使感染风险低至 1%,疫苗效力低至 25%。接种疫苗的个体可能会带来净成本节省,随着感染风险或疫苗效力的增加而大幅增加。
结论/意义:结果表明,T. cruzi 疫苗可能会带来巨大的经济效益,这取决于疫苗的成本,并支持继续努力开发针对人类的疫苗。