Wallace Ryan M, Undurraga Eduardo A, Blanton Jesse D, Cleaton Julie, Franka Richard
National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention , Atlanta, GA , USA.
Front Vet Sci. 2017 Feb 10;4:9. doi: 10.3389/fvets.2017.00009. eCollection 2017.
Rabies imposes a substantial burden to about half of the world population. The World Health Organization (WHO), World Organization for Animal Health, and the Food and Agriculture Organization have set the goal of eliminating dog-mediated human rabies deaths by 2030. This could be achieved largely by massive administration of post-exposure prophylaxis-in perpetuity-, through elimination of dog rabies, or combining both. Here, we focused on the resources needed for the elimination of dog rabies virus by 2030.
Drawing from multiple datasets, including national dog vaccination campaigns, rabies literature, and expert opinion, we developed a model considering country-specific current dog vaccination capacity to estimate the years and resources required to achieve dog rabies elimination by 2030. Resources were determined based on four factors: (a) country development status, (b) dog vaccination costs, (c) dog rabies vaccine availability, and (d) existing animal health workers. Our calculations were based on the WHO's estimate that vaccinating 70% of the dog population for seven consecutive years would eliminate rabies.
If dog rabies vaccine production remains at 2015 levels, we estimate that there will be a cumulative shortage of about 7.5 billion doses to meet expected demand to achieve dog rabies elimination. We estimated a present cost of $6,300 million to eliminate dog rabies in all endemic countries, equivalent to a $3,900 million gap compared to current spending. To eliminate dog rabies, the vaccination workforce may suffice if all public health veterinarians in endemic countries were to dedicate 3 months each year to dog rabies vaccination. We discuss implications of potential technology improvements, including population management, vaccine price reduction, and increases in dog-vaccinating capacities.
Our results highlight the resources needed to achieve elimination of dog-mediated human rabies deaths by 2030. As exemplified by multiple successful disease elimination efforts, one size does not fit all. We suggest pragmatic and feasible options toward global dog rabies elimination by 2030, while identifying several benefits and drawbacks of specific approaches. We hope that these results help stimulate and inform a necessary discussion on global and regional strategic planning, resource mobilization, and continuous execution of rabies virus elimination.
狂犬病给全球约一半人口带来了沉重负担。世界卫生组织(WHO)、世界动物卫生组织和联合国粮食及农业组织设定了到2030年消除犬传人狂犬病死亡病例的目标。这一目标很大程度上可通过长期大规模实施暴露后预防措施、消除犬只狂犬病或两者结合来实现。在此,我们重点关注到2030年消除犬只狂犬病病毒所需的资源。
我们利用多个数据集,包括国家犬只疫苗接种活动、狂犬病文献以及专家意见,开发了一个模型,该模型考虑了各国当前的犬只疫苗接种能力,以估算到2030年消除犬只狂犬病所需的年份和资源。资源是根据四个因素确定的:(a)国家发展状况,(b)犬只疫苗接种成本,(c)犬用狂犬病疫苗的可获得性,以及(d)现有的动物卫生工作者。我们的计算基于世界卫生组织的估计,即连续七年为70%的犬只接种疫苗将消除狂犬病。
如果犬用狂犬病疫苗产量维持在2015年的水平,我们估计为实现犬只狂犬病消除以满足预期需求,累计将短缺约75亿剂疫苗。我们估计在所有流行国家消除犬只狂犬病目前需要63亿美元的成本,与当前支出相比,缺口达39亿美元。为了消除犬只狂犬病,如果流行国家的所有公共卫生兽医每年都投入3个月时间进行犬用狂犬病疫苗接种,接种人员可能足够。我们讨论了潜在技术改进的影响,包括种群管理、疫苗降价以及犬只接种能力的提高。
我们的结果突出了到2030年消除犬传人狂犬病死亡病例所需的资源。正如多项成功的疾病消除工作所表明的那样,一刀切并不适用。我们提出了到2030年全球消除犬只狂犬病的务实可行方案,同时指出了具体方法的若干利弊。我们希望这些结果有助于推动并为关于全球和区域战略规划、资源调动以及持续开展狂犬病病毒消除工作的必要讨论提供信息。