a Serum Institute of India Pvt. Ltd. , Pune , India.
b Regional Office, World Health Organization (WHO) , Brazzaville , Congo.
Hum Vaccin Immunother. 2018 May 4;14(5):1098-1102. doi: 10.1080/21645515.2017.1378841. Epub 2017 Nov 8.
The introduction of a new Group A meningococcal conjugate vaccine, MenAfriVac, has been a important public health success. Group A meningococcal meningitis has disappeared in all countries where the new Men A conjugate vaccine has been used at public health scale. However, continued control of Group A disease in sub-Saharan Africa will require that community immunity against Group A meningococci be maintained. Modeling studies have shown that unless herd immunity is maintained Group A meningococcal disease will return. To ensure that African populations remain protected birth cohorts must be protected with an EPI formulation of MenAfriVac (5 mcg) given at 9 months with Measles 1. In addition, populations born after the initial 1-29 year old campaigns and consequently not yet immunized with the new Men A conjugate vaccine, will have to be immunized in country-specific catch-up campaigns. Countries with poor EPI coverage (Measles 1 coverage < 60%) will likely need quinquennial vaccination campaigns aimed at covering 1-4 year olds. Implementing these strategies is the only sure way of ensuring that Group A meningococcal meningitis epidemics will not recur. A second problem that requires urgent attention is the challenge of dealing with Non-A meningococcal meningitis epidemics in sub-Saharan Africa. Groups C, W and X meningococci are well-established circulating strains in sub-Saharan Africa and are responsible for yearly focal meningitis epidemics that vary in severity and remain unpredictable as to size and geographic distribution. For this reason, polyvalent meningococcal conjugate vaccines that are affordable and appropriate for the African context must be developed and introduced. These new meningococcal vaccines when combined with more affordable pneumococcal conjugate vaccines offer the promise of a meningitis-free Sub-Saharan Africa.
引入一种新的 A 群脑膜炎球菌结合疫苗(MenAfriVac)是公共卫生领域的重大成功。在大规模使用新型 A 群结合疫苗的国家,A 群脑膜炎球菌脑膜炎已消失。然而,要想继续控制撒哈拉以南非洲的 A 群疾病,就必须保持针对 A 群脑膜炎奈瑟菌的社区免疫力。模型研究表明,除非保持群体免疫,否则 A 群脑膜炎球菌病将会卷土重来。为确保非洲人群继续得到保护,出生队列必须用 EPI 配方的 MenAfriVac(5μg)进行保护,在 9 个月大时与麻疹 1 起接种。此外,在最初的 1-29 岁疫苗接种运动之后出生的人群,尚未用新型 A 群结合疫苗进行免疫,必须在国家特定的补种运动中进行免疫。EPI 覆盖率低(麻疹 1 覆盖率<60%)的国家可能需要每五年进行一次疫苗接种运动,目标是覆盖 1-4 岁儿童。实施这些策略是确保 A 群脑膜炎球菌脑膜炎不再流行的唯一可靠方法。另一个需要紧急关注的问题是处理撒哈拉以南非洲的非 A 群脑膜炎球菌脑膜炎流行的挑战。C、W 和 X 群脑膜炎奈瑟菌是撒哈拉以南非洲流行的固定菌株,每年都会引起局部脑膜炎流行,其严重程度不同,且大小和地理分布都难以预测。因此,必须开发和引入适合非洲情况、负担得起的多价脑膜炎球菌结合疫苗。这些新的脑膜炎球菌疫苗与更负担得起的肺炎球菌结合疫苗结合使用,有望使撒哈拉以南非洲免受脑膜炎的困扰。