Oidtman Rachel J, Meleleo Giulio, Sharomi Oluwaseun, Matthews Ian R, Ntais Dionysios, Nachbar Robert B, Malik Tufail M, Bakker Kevin M
Merck & Co., Inc., Rahway, NJ, USA.
Wolfram Research, Inc., Champaign, IL, USA.
Infect Dis Ther. 2025 Mar;14(3):587-602. doi: 10.1007/s40121-025-01111-8. Epub 2025 Feb 11.
Pneumococcal conjugate vaccines (PCVs) were first introduced in the paediatric United Kingdom (UK) immunisation programme in 2006 which led to significant declines in invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) caused by targeted serotypes. Although paediatric PCVs provide some indirect protection to adults, a significant IPD burden remains in older adults. Here, we compared three adult (65+ years-old) and risk group (2-64-year-old) vaccination scenarios, namely a continuation of the status quo with PPSV23 vaccination, using the recently licensed-in-adults PCV20, or using the new adult-focused 21-valent PCV, V116.
A population-level compartmental dynamic transmission model (DTM) was adapted to the UK setting. The model described Streptococcus pneumoniae carriage transmission dynamics and disease progression in the presence of age- and serotype-specific pneumococcal vaccines. We calibrated the DTM to age- and serotype-specific IPD data in the UK and used the model to make projections under the different adult vaccination scenarios while keeping PCV13 immunisation in children.
The calibrated model yielded reasonable parameter values and model fits that closely matched observed IPD dynamics. Among 65+ year-olds, 10-year model projections predicted that the routine use of V116 would reduce IPD incidence by 15.5%, while PCV20 would reduce IPD incidence by 8.9% and the continued use of PPSV23 would increase incidence by 3.83%. There was a notable decrease in IPD incidence in the serotypes unique to V116. In the serotypes included in PCV20 but not V116, the model did not predict a resurgence of IPD.
Projections revealed that in adults, V116 led to significantly greater reductions in IPD in the 65+ year-old population compared with PCV20 or PPSV23.
肺炎球菌结合疫苗(PCV)于2006年首次被纳入英国儿童免疫计划,这使得由目标血清型引起的侵袭性肺炎球菌疾病(IPD)显著减少。尽管儿童PCV为成年人提供了一定的间接保护,但老年人中仍存在显著的IPD负担。在此,我们比较了三种针对成年人(65岁及以上)和风险人群(2至64岁)的疫苗接种方案,即继续使用23价肺炎球菌多糖疫苗(PPSV23)维持现状、使用最近获批用于成年人的20价肺炎球菌结合疫苗(PCV20)或使用新的针对成年人的21价肺炎球菌结合疫苗V116。
将一个人群水平的房室动态传播模型(DTM)应用于英国的情况。该模型描述了在存在年龄和血清型特异性肺炎球菌疫苗的情况下肺炎链球菌的携带传播动态和疾病进展。我们将DTM校准到英国年龄和血清型特异性的IPD数据,并使用该模型在不同的成人疫苗接种方案下进行预测,同时维持儿童接种13价肺炎球菌结合疫苗(PCV13)。
校准后的模型产生了合理的参数值,并且模型拟合与观察到的IPD动态密切匹配。在65岁及以上人群中,10年的模型预测表明,常规使用V116将使IPD发病率降低15.5%,而PCV20将使IPD发病率降低8.9%,继续使用PPSV23将使发病率增加3.83%。V116特有的血清型的IPD发病率显著下降。在PCV20中包含但V116中不包含的血清型中,模型未预测IPD会再次出现。
预测结果显示,在成年人中,与PCV20或PPSV23相比,V116在65岁及以上人群中导致IPD的减少幅度显著更大。