Department of Public Health, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center Rotterdam, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Basel, Switzerland.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2020 Jul 2;14(7):e0008468. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0008468. eCollection 2020 Jul.
Human visceral leishmaniasis (VL) vaccines are currently under development and there is a need to understand their potential impact on population wide VL incidence. We implement four characteristics from different human VL vaccine candidates into two published VL transmission model variants to estimate the potential impact of these vaccine characteristics on population-wide anthroponotic VL incidence on the Indian subcontinent (ISC). The vaccines that are simulated in this study 1) reduce the infectiousness of infected individuals towards sand flies, 2) reduce risk of developing symptoms after infection, 3) reduce the risk of developing post-kala-azar dermal leishmaniasis (PKDL), or 4) lead to the development of transient immunity. We also compare and combine a vaccine strategy with current interventions to identify their potential role in elimination of VL as a public health problem. We show that the first two simulated vaccine characteristics can greatly reduce VL incidence. For these vaccines, an approximate 60% vaccine efficacy would lead to achieving the ISC elimination target (<1 VL case per 10,000 population per year) within 10 years' time in a moderately endemic setting when vaccinating 100% of the population. Vaccinating VL cases to prevent the development of PKDL is a promising tool to sustain the low incidence elimination target after regular interventions are halted. Vaccines triggering the development of transient immunity protecting against infection lead to the biggest reduction in VL incidence, but booster doses are required to achieve perduring impact. Even though vaccines are not yet available for implementation, their development should be pursued as their potential impact on transmission can be substantial, both in decreasing incidence at the population level as well as in sustaining the ISC elimination target when other interventions are halted.
人类内脏利什曼病 (VL) 疫苗目前正在开发中,因此需要了解它们对人群广泛 VL 发病率的潜在影响。我们将来自四种不同人类 VL 候选疫苗的四个特征纳入两个已发表的 VL 传播模型变体中,以估计这些疫苗特征对印度次大陆(ISC)人群内脏利什曼病发病率的潜在影响。本研究中模拟的疫苗具有以下特征:1)降低感染者对沙蝇的传染性,2)降低感染后出现症状的风险,3)降低出现黑热病后皮肤利什曼病(PKDL)的风险,或 4)导致产生短暂免疫力。我们还比较和组合了一种疫苗策略与当前干预措施,以确定它们在消除作为公共卫生问题的 VL 方面的潜在作用。我们表明,前两种模拟的疫苗特征可以大大降低 VL 发病率。对于这些疫苗,当在中度流行地区为 100%的人群接种疫苗,且疫苗效力约为 60%时,可在 10 年内达到 ISC 消除目标(每年每 10,000 人口中 VL 病例数<1)。接种 VL 病例疫苗以预防 PKDL 的发展是在常规干预停止后维持低发病率消除目标的有前途的工具。引发短暂免疫力以防止感染的疫苗可显著降低 VL 发病率,但需要加强剂量以实现持久的影响。尽管疫苗尚未可供实施,但应继续开发,因为它们对传播的潜在影响可能是巨大的,无论是在降低人群发病率方面,还是在常规干预停止后维持 ISC 消除目标方面。