London Centre for Neglected Tropical Disease Research, London, United Kingdom; Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, St Mary's Campus, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.; MRC Centre for Global Infectious Disease Analysis, United Kingdom.
Mathematics Institute, University of Warwick, United Kingdom; School of Life Sciences, University of Warwick, United Kingdom.
Vaccine. 2020 Jun 9;38(28):4379-4386. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2020.04.078. Epub 2020 May 14.
Schistosomiasis is one of the most important neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) affecting millions of people in 79 different countries. The World Health Organization (WHO) has specified two control goals to be achieved by 2020 and 2025 - morbidity control and elimination as a public health problem (EPHP). Mass drug administration (MDA) is the main method for schistosomiasis control but it has sometimes proved difficult to both secure adequate supplies of the most efficacious drug praziquantel to treat the millions infected either annually or biannually, and to achieve high treatment coverage in targeted communities in regions of endemic infection. The development of alternative control methods remains a priority. In this paper, using stochastic individual-based models, we analyze whether the addition of a novel vaccine alone or in combination with drug treatment, is a more effective control strategy, in terms of achieving the WHO goals, as well as the time and costs to achieve these goals when compared to MDA alone. The key objective of our analyses is to help facilitate decision making for moving a promising candidate vaccine through the phase I, II and III trials in humans to a final product for use in resource poor settings. We find that in low to moderate transmission settings, both vaccination and MDA are highly likely to achieve the WHO goals within 15 years and are likely to be cost-effective. In high transmission settings, MDA alone is unable to achieve the goals, whereas vaccination is able to achieve both goals in combination with MDA. In these settings Vaccination is cost-effective, even for short duration vaccines, so long as vaccination costs up to US$7.60 per full course of vaccination. The public health value of the vaccine depends on the duration of vaccine protection, the baseline prevalence prior to vaccination and the WHO goal.
血吸虫病是影响 79 个不同国家数百万人的最重要的被忽视热带病(NTD)之一。世界卫生组织(WHO)已经指定了两个到 2020 年和 2025 年要实现的控制目标-发病率控制和消除作为公共卫生问题(EPHP)。大规模药物治疗(MDA)是血吸虫病控制的主要方法,但有时难以确保每年或每两年治疗数百万感染者的最有效药物吡喹酮的供应充足,并在流行感染地区的目标社区实现高治疗覆盖率。开发替代控制方法仍然是一个优先事项。在本文中,我们使用随机个体基础模型分析,在达到 WHO 目标方面,以及与单独 MDA 相比,添加新疫苗单独或与药物治疗联合使用是否是一种更有效的控制策略,以及达到这些目标所需的时间和成本。我们分析的关键目标是,当一种有前途的候选疫苗从 I 期、II 期和 III 期临床试验进入最终产品,在资源匮乏的环境中使用时,帮助推动决策。我们发现,在低至中度传播环境中,疫苗接种和 MDA 都很有可能在 15 年内达到世卫组织的目标,而且可能具有成本效益。在高传播环境中,单独的 MDA 无法实现目标,而疫苗接种则可以与 MDA 结合实现这两个目标。在这些环境中,即使是短期疫苗,只要疫苗接种费用高达每全程接种 7.60 美元,疫苗接种也是具有成本效益的。疫苗的公共卫生价值取决于疫苗保护的持续时间、接种前的基线流行率和世卫组织的目标。