The Program for Experimental & Theoretical Modeling, Division of Hepatology, Department of Medicine, Loyola University, Medical Center, Maywood, IL, USA.
The Program for Experimental & Theoretical Modeling, Division of Hepatology, Department of Medicine, Loyola University, Medical Center, Maywood, IL, USA; Division of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA.
Vaccine. 2019 May 1;37(19):2608-2616. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2019.02.081. Epub 2019 Apr 5.
Persons who inject drugs (PWID) are at highest risk for acquiring and transmitting hepatitis C (HCV) infection. The recent availability of oral direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapy with reported cure rates >90% can prevent HCV transmission, making HCV elimination an attainable goal among PWID. The World Health Organization (WHO) recently proposed a 90% reduction in HCV incidence as a key objective. However, given barriers to the use of DAAs in PWID, including cost, restricted access to DAAs, and risk of reinfection, combination strategies including the availability of effective vaccines are needed to eradicate HCV as a public health threat. This study aims to model the cost and efficacy of a dual modality approach using HCV vaccines combined with DAAs to reduce HCV incidence by 90% and prevalence by 50% in PWID populations.
We developed a mathematical model that represents the HCV epidemic among PWID and calibrated it to empirical data from metropolitan Chicago, Illinois. Four medical interventions were considered: vaccination of HCV naive PWID, DAA treatment, DAA treatment followed by vaccination, and, a combination of vaccination and DAA treatment.
The combination of vaccination and DAAs is the lowest cost-expensive intervention for achieving the WHO target of 90% incidence reduction. The use of DAAs without a vaccine is much less cost-effective with the additional risk of reinfection after treatment. Vaccination of naïve PWID alone, even when scaled-up to all reachable PWID, cannot achieve 90% reduction of incidence in high-prevalence populations due to infections occurring before vaccination. Similarly, the lowest cost-expensive way to halve prevalence in 15 years is through the combination of vaccination and DAAs.
The modeling results underscore the importance of developing an effective HCV vaccine and augmenting DAAs with vaccines in HCV intervention strategies in order to achieve efficient reductions in incidence and prevalence.
注射毒品者(PWID)感染丙型肝炎(HCV)的风险最高。最近出现的口服直接作用抗病毒(DAA)治疗方法,报告的治愈率超过 90%,可以预防 HCV 传播,使 HCV 消除成为 PWID 中的一个可行目标。世界卫生组织(WHO)最近提出了将 HCV 发病率降低 90%作为一个关键目标。然而,鉴于 PWID 使用 DAA 存在障碍,包括成本、DAA 获得受限以及再感染风险,需要结合包括有效疫苗在内的联合策略来消除 HCV 对公共卫生的威胁。本研究旨在通过 HCV 疫苗联合 DAA 来建立一种双模式方法,以降低 PWID 人群中 HCV 发病率 90%和流行率 50%的成本效益模型。
我们开发了一个数学模型,用于代表 PWID 中的 HCV 流行情况,并根据伊利诺伊州芝加哥大都市的经验数据对其进行了校准。考虑了四种医疗干预措施:HCV 未感染的 PWID 疫苗接种、DAA 治疗、DAA 治疗后接种疫苗,以及疫苗接种和 DAA 治疗的联合。
疫苗接种和 DAA 的联合是实现 90%发病率降低目标的最低成本干预措施。不使用疫苗的 DAA 治疗方法的成本效益要低得多,并且在治疗后还有再感染的额外风险。单独对未感染的 PWID 进行疫苗接种,即使扩大到所有可到达的 PWID,也不能在高流行率人群中实现 90%的发病率降低,因为在疫苗接种之前就已经发生了感染。同样,在 15 年内将流行率减半的最低成本干预措施是通过疫苗接种和 DAA 的联合。
建模结果强调了开发有效的 HCV 疫苗的重要性,并在 HCV 干预策略中用疫苗来增强 DAA,以实现发病率和流行率的有效降低。