Athena Institute, VU Amsterdam, the Netherlands; National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), Centre for Infectious Disease Control (Cib), Bilthoven, the Netherlands.
National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), Centre for Infectious Disease Control (Cib), Bilthoven, the Netherlands.
Vaccine. 2021 May 18;39(21):2876-2885. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2021.04.001. Epub 2021 Apr 22.
Neonatal invasive Group B Streptococcus (GBS) infection causes considerable disease burden in the Netherlands. Intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis (IAP) prevents early-onset disease (EOD), but has no effect on late-onset disease (LOD). A potential maternal GBS vaccine could prevent both EOD and LOD by conferring immunity in neonates.
Explore under which circumstances maternal vaccination against GBS would be cost-effective as an addition to, or replacement for the current risk factor-based IAP prevention strategy in the Netherlands.
We assessed the maximum cost-effective price per dose of a trivalent (serotypes Ia, Ib, and III) and hexavalent (additional serotypes II, IV, and V) GBS vaccine in addition to, or as a replacement for IAP. To project the prevented costs and disease burden, a decision tree model was developed to reflect neonatal GBS disease and long-term health outcomes among a cohort based on 169,836 live births in the Netherlands in 2017.
Under base-case conditions, maternal immunization with a trivalent vaccine would gain 186 QALYs and prevent more than €3.1 million in health care costs when implemented in addition to IAP. Immunization implemented as a replacement for IAP would gain 88 QALYs compared to the current prevention strategy, prevent €1.5 million in health care costs, and avoid potentially ~ 30,000 IAP administrations. The base-case results correspond to a maximum price of €58 per dose (vaccine + administration costs; using a threshold of €20,000/QALY). Expanding the serotype coverage to a hexavalent vaccine would only have a limited additional impact on the cost-effectiveness in the Netherlands.
A maternal GBS vaccine could be cost-effective when implemented in addition to the current risk factor-based IAP prevention strategy in the Netherlands. Discontinuation of IAP would save costs and prevent antibiotic use, however, is projected to lead to a lower health gain compared to vaccination in addition to IAP.
新生儿侵袭性 B 型链球菌(GBS)感染在荷兰造成了相当大的疾病负担。产时抗生素预防(IAP)可预防早发性疾病(EOD),但对晚发性疾病(LOD)无效。一种潜在的针对 GBS 的母亲疫苗可以通过在新生儿中产生免疫力来预防 EOD 和 LOD。
探讨在何种情况下,针对 GBS 的母亲疫苗接种作为荷兰目前基于危险因素的 IAP 预防策略的补充或替代方案具有成本效益。
我们评估了在 IAP 之外或替代 IAP 接种的三种(血清型 Ia、Ib 和 III)和六种(另外的血清型 II、IV 和 V)GBS 疫苗的每剂量最高成本效益价格。为了预测预防成本和疾病负担,我们开发了一个决策树模型,以反映基于 2017 年荷兰 169836 例活产儿的新生儿 GBS 疾病和长期健康结果的队列。
在基本情况下,当在 IAP 之外实施时,三价疫苗的母亲免疫接种将获得 186 个 QALYs,并预防超过 310 万欧元的医疗保健费用。与当前的预防策略相比,免疫接种作为 IAP 的替代方案实施将获得 88 个 QALYs,预防 150 万欧元的医疗保健费用,并避免潜在的~30000 次 IAP 管理。基本情况的结果对应于每剂 58 欧元的最高价格(疫苗+管理费用;使用 20000 欧元/QALY 的阈值)。扩大血清型覆盖范围到六价疫苗只会对荷兰的成本效益产生有限的额外影响。
当在荷兰目前基于危险因素的 IAP 预防策略之外实施时,母亲 GBS 疫苗可能具有成本效益。停止 IAP 将节省成本并预防抗生素使用,但与 IAP 之外的疫苗接种相比,预计会降低健康收益。