期刊论文详细信息
Fractional dosing of yellow fever vaccine to extend supply: a modelling study
Article
关键词: EPIDEMIC;    OUTBREAK;    SPREAD;    ANGOLA;    VECTOR;    VIRUS;   
DOI  :  10.1016/S0140-6736(16)31838-4
来源: SCIE
【 摘 要 】

Background The ongoing yellow fever epidemic in Angola strains the global vaccine supply, prompting WHO to adopt dose sparing for its vaccination campaign in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo, in July-August, 2016. Although a 5-fold fractional-dose vaccine is similar to standard-dose vaccine in safety and immunogenicity, effi cacy is untested. There is an urgent need to ensure the robustness of fractional-dose vaccination by elucidation of the conditions under which dose fractionation would reduce transmission. Methods We estimate the eff ective reproductive number for yellow fever in Angola using disease natural history and case report data. With simple mathematical models of yellow fever transmission, we calculate the infection attack rate (the proportion of population infected over the course of an epidemic) with various levels of transmissibility and 5-fold fractional-dose vaccine effi cacy for two vaccination scenarios, ie, random vaccination in a hypothetical population that is completely susceptible, and the Kinshasa vaccination campaign in July-August, 2016, with diff erent age cutoff for fractional-dose vaccines. Findings We estimate the eff ective reproductive number early in the Angola outbreak was between 5.2 and 7.1. If vaccine action is all-or-nothing (ie, a proportion of vaccine recipients receive complete protection [VE] and the remainder receive no protection), n-fold fractionation can greatly reduce infection attack rate as long as VE exceeds 1/ n. This benefi t threshold becomes more stringent if vaccine action is leaky (ie, the susceptibility of each vaccine recipient is reduced by a factor that is equal to the vaccine effi cacy). The age cutoff for fractional-dose vaccines chosen by WHO for the Kinshasa vaccination campaign (2 years) provides the largest reduction in infection attack rate if the effi cacy of 5-fold fractional-dose vaccines exceeds 20%. Interpretation Dose fractionation is an eff ective strategy for reduction of the infection attack rate that would be robust with a large margin for error in case fractional-dose VE is lower than expected.

【 授权许可】

Free   

  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:0次 浏览次数:0次