From the Division of Sexually Transmitted Disease Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA.
Department of Mathematics, University of Latvia, Rīga, Latvia.
Sex Transm Dis. 2024 Jun 1;51(6):381-387. doi: 10.1097/OLQ.0000000000001957. Epub 2024 Feb 23.
Gonorrhea's rapid development of antimicrobial resistance underscores the importance of new prevention modalities. Recent evidence suggests that a serogroup B meningococcal vaccine may be partially effective against gonococcal infection. However, the viability of vaccination and the role it should play in gonorrhea prevention are an open question.
We modeled the transmission of gonorrhea over a 10-year period in a heterosexual population to find optimal patterns of year-over-year investment of a fixed budget in vaccination and screening programs. Each year, resources could be allocated to vaccinating people or enrolling them in a quarterly screening program. Stratifying by mode (vaccination vs. screening), sex (male vs. female), and enrollment venue (background screening vs. symptomatic visit), we consider 8 different ways of controlling gonorrhea. We then found the year-over-year pattern of investment among those 8 controls that most reduced the incidence of gonorrhea under different assumptions. A compartmental transmission model was parameterized from existing literature in the US context.
Vaccinating men with recent symptomatic infection, which selected for higher sexual activity, was optimal for population-level gonorrhea control. Given a prevention budget of $3 per capita, 9.5% of infections could be averted ($299 per infection averted), decreasing gonorrhea sequelae and associated antimicrobial use by similar percentages. These results were consistent across sensitivity analyses that increased the budget, prioritized incidence or prevalence reductions in women, or lowered screening costs. Under a scenario where only screening was implemented, just 5.5% of infections were averted.
A currently available vaccine, although only modestly effective, may be superior to frequent testing for population-level gonorrhea control.
淋病对抗微生物药物的耐药性迅速发展,凸显了开发新预防方法的重要性。最近的证据表明,B 群脑膜炎球菌疫苗可能对淋病感染具有部分效果。然而,疫苗接种的可行性及其在淋病预防中应发挥的作用仍是一个悬而未决的问题。
我们建立了一个在异性恋人群中传播淋病的 10 年模型,以找到在接种疫苗和筛查方案上固定预算逐年投资的最佳模式。每年,资源可用于为人群接种疫苗或使其参加每季度的筛查计划。我们按模式(接种疫苗与筛查)、性别(男性与女性)和登记地点(背景筛查与有症状就诊)进行分层,考虑了 8 种不同的淋病控制方式。然后,我们根据 8 种控制方法中的每一种,找到了在不同假设条件下最能降低淋病发病率的逐年投资模式。基于美国背景下的现有文献,我们利用房室传播模型对参数进行了设定。
对近期有症状感染的男性进行接种,选择更活跃的性活动,这是控制人群淋病的最佳方法。在预防预算为每人 3 美元的情况下,可以避免 9.5%的感染(避免每例感染的费用为 299 美元),从而使淋病后遗症和相关抗菌药物的使用减少相同的百分比。这些结果在敏感性分析中是一致的,敏感性分析增加了预算、优先考虑女性的发病率或患病率降低,或降低了筛查成本。在仅实施筛查的情况下,仅避免了 5.5%的感染。
虽然目前可用的疫苗效果有限,但对于控制人群淋病而言,可能优于频繁检测。