Institute for Health and Department of Economics, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, USA.
Department of Healthcare Management and Policy, School of Public Health, Seoul National University, 1 Gwanak-ro, Gwanak-gu, Seoul 08826, South Korea.
Vaccine. 2017 Dec 14;35(49 Pt B):6905-6914. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2017.07.108. Epub 2017 Nov 10.
A maternal group B streptococcal (GBS) vaccine could prevent neonatal sepsis and meningitis. Its cost-effectiveness in low-income sub-Saharan Africa, a high burden region, is unknown.
We used a decision tree model, with Markov nodes to project infants' lifetimes, to compare maternal immunization delivered through routine antenatal care with no immunization. 37 countries were clustered on the basis of economic and health resources and past public health performance. Vaccine efficacy for covered serotypes was ranged from 50% to 90%. The model projected EOGBS (early-onset) and LOGBS (late-onset) cases and deaths, disability-adjusted life years (DALYs), healthcare costs (2014 US$), and cost-effectiveness for a representative country in each of the four clusters: Guinea-Bissau, Uganda, Nigeria, and Ghana. Maximum vaccination costs/dose were estimated to meet two cost-effectiveness benchmarks, 0.5 GDP and GDP per capita/DALY, for ranges of disease incidence (reported and adjusted for under-reporting) and vaccine efficacy.
At coverage equal to the proportion of pregnant women with≥4 antenatal visits (ANC4) and serotype-specific vaccine efficacy of 70%, maternal GBS immunization would prevent one-third of GBS cases and deaths in Uganda and Nigeria, where ANC4 is 50%, 42-43% in Guinea-Bissau (ANC4=65%), and 55-57% in Ghana (ANC4=87%). At a vaccination cost of $7/dose, maternal immunization would cost $320-$350/DALY averted in Guinea-Bissau, Nigeria, and Ghana, less than half these countries' GDP per capita. In Uganda, which has the lowest case fatality ratios, the cost would be $573/DALY. If the vaccine prevents a small proportion of stillbirths, it would be even more cost-effective. Vaccination cost/dose, disease incidence, and case fatality were key drivers of cost/DALY in sensitivity analyses.
Maternal GBS immunization could be a cost-effective intervention in low-income sub-Saharan Africa, with cost-effectiveness ratios similar to other recently introduced vaccines. The vaccination cost at which introduction is cost-effective depends on disease incidence and vaccine efficacy. Clinical Trial registry name and registration number: Not applicable.
B 型链球菌(GBS)疫苗可以预防新生儿败血症和脑膜炎。在高负担地区的撒哈拉以南非洲低收入国家,其成本效益尚不清楚。
我们使用决策树模型,采用马尔可夫节点来预测婴儿的寿命,比较通过常规产前护理进行的母婴免疫接种与不进行免疫接种。根据经济和卫生资源以及过去的公共卫生表现,将 37 个国家聚类。覆盖血清型的疫苗效力范围为 50%至 90%。该模型预测 EOGBS(早发)和 LOGBS(晚发)病例和死亡、残疾调整生命年(DALY)、医疗保健成本(2014 年美元),以及四个聚类中每个国家的代表性国家的成本效益:几内亚比绍、乌干达、尼日利亚和加纳。最高疫苗接种成本/剂量估计是为了满足两个成本效益基准,即 0.5 GDP 和人均 GDP/DALY,用于报告和调整报告不足的疾病发病率和疫苗效力范围。
在覆盖比例等于接受≥4 次产前检查(ANC4)的孕妇比例和特定血清型疫苗效力为 70%的情况下,在 ANC4 为 50%的乌干达和尼日利亚,以及 ANC4 为 65%的几内亚比绍和 87%的加纳,母婴 GBS 免疫接种将预防三分之一的 GBS 病例和死亡。在每剂 7 美元的疫苗接种成本下,在几内亚比绍、尼日利亚和加纳,母婴免疫接种的成本将低于这些国家人均 GDP 的一半,每个 DALY 可避免 320-350 美元。在乌干达,其病死率最低,成本为每 DALY573 美元。如果疫苗可以预防一小部分死产,它的成本效益将更高。疫苗接种成本/剂量、疾病发病率和病死率是敏感性分析中成本/DALY 的关键驱动因素。
在撒哈拉以南非洲低收入国家,GBS 母婴免疫接种可能是一种具有成本效益的干预措施,其成本效益比类似于最近推出的其他疫苗。引入具有成本效益的疫苗接种成本取决于疾病发病率和疫苗效力。临床试验注册名称和注册号:不适用。