| Literature DB >> 22894964 |
Bruce Y Lee1, Kristina M Bacon, Angela R Wateska, Maria Elena Bottazzi, Eric Dumonteil, Peter J Hotez.
Abstract
The health burden of Chagas' disease (resulting from Trypanosoma cruzi infection) in Latin America (estimated to outweigh that of malaria by 5-fold and affect 2-6 million people in Mexico alone) has motivated development of therapeutic vaccines to prevent infection progression to severe disease. Our economic model for a Chagas' therapeutic vaccine in Mexico suggests that a vaccine would be highly cost-effective and in many cases economically dominant (providing both cost savings and health benefits) throughout a range of protection durations, severe adverse event risk, and dosing regimens and would be most likely to provide a positive return on investment if the vaccine prevented (rather than delayed) the onset of cardiomyopathy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22894964 PMCID: PMC3579910 DOI: 10.4161/hv.20966
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Vaccin Immunother ISSN: 2164-5515 Impact factor: 3.452