| Literature DB >> 24132203 |
Christian Bottomley1, Anna Roca, Philip C Hill, Brian Greenwood, Valerie Isham.
Abstract
A number of childhood vaccination programmes have recently introduced vaccination against Streptococcus pneumoniae, the pneumococcus, a major cause of pneumonia and meningitis. The pneumococcal conjugate vaccines (PCVs) that are currently in use only protect against some serotypes of the bacterium, and there is now strong evidence that those serotypes not included in the vaccine increase in prevalence among most vaccinated populations. We present a mathematical model for the dynamics of nasopharyngeal carriage of S. pneumoniae that allows for carriage with multiple serotypes. The model is used to predict the prevalence of vaccine type (VT) and non-VT (NVT) serotypes following the introduction of PCV. Parameter estimates for the model are obtained by maximum likelihood using pre-vaccination data from The Gambia. The model predicts that low (1, 6A and 9V) and medium (4, 5, 7F, 14, 18C, 19A and 19F) prevalence serotypes can be eliminated through vaccination, but that the overall prevalence of carriage will be reduced only slightly because of an increase in the prevalence of NVT serotypes. Serotype replacement will be sequential, with high and medium prevalence NVT serotypes dominating initially, followed by an increase of serotypes of low prevalence. We examine the impact of a hypothetical vaccine that provides partial protection against all serotypes, and find that this reduces overall carriage, but is unable to eliminate low or medium prevalence serotypes.Entities:
Keywords: bacterial carriage; mathematical model; pneumococcal vaccine; serotype replacement
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24132203 PMCID: PMC3808555 DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2013.0786
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J R Soc Interface ISSN: 1742-5662 Impact factor: 4.118
Figure 1.The prevalence of pneumococcal serotypes before vaccination (a), and the prevalence of carriage after the introduction of vaccination at three different levels of coverage (b).
Description of variables and parameters.
| descriptiona | variable/parameter | estimate (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|
| proportion of population with immune history | n.a. | |
| proportion of population carriers of class | n.a. | |
| proportion of population with immune history | n.a. | |
| contact rate for low transmission serotypes among non-carriers | 0.085 (0.066,0.109) | |
| contact rate for medium transmission serotypes among non-carriers | 0.090 (0.064,0.128) | |
| contact rate for high transmission serotypes among non-carriers | 0.143 (0.071,0.289) | |
| factor by which the rate of acquisition is reduced for carriers | 0.630 (0.407,0.975) | |
| proportion that develop immunity after carriage | 0.051 (0.032,0.082) | |
| rate of carriage clearance for low transmission serotypes | 0.049 (0.035,0.068) | |
| rate of carriage clearance for medium transmission serotypes | 0.039 (0.031,0.049) | |
| rate of carriage clearance for high transmission serotypes | 0.031 (0.025,0.038) | |
| 0.00011b | ||
| vaccine efficacy | 0.5c |
aRates per capita per day.
bBased on an estimated crude birth rate in The Gambia of 40 per 1000 per year.
cEstimated for PCV7 in [11].
Loss and acquisition of serotypes in consecutive nasopharyngeal swabs. Nasopharyngeal swabs were taken every two weeks over 50 weeks, and serotypes are grouped as low, medium and high prevalence. The total number of transitions is reported, together with the observed probability of transition, and the probability predicted by the model (obs., obseved/pred., predicted).
| from: | to: no carriage (obs./pred.) | low (obs./pred.) | medium (obs./pred.) | high (obs./pred.) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| no carriage | 40 (0.037/0.038) | 123 (0.114/0.114) | 111 (0.103/0.100) | 1075 | |
| low | 50 (0.472/0.409) | 9 (0.085/0.029) | 12 (0.113/0.090) | 15 (0.142/0.081) | 106 |
| medium | 119 (0.317/0.354) | 15 (0.040/0.029) | 40 (0.107/0.087) | 34 (0.091/0.085) | 375 |
| high | 119 (0.285/0.304) | 14 (0.034/0.029) | 40 (0.096/0.095) | 28 (0.067/0.087) | 417 |
aTotal number of pairs of consecutive swabs.
Figure 2.The prevalence of carriage after the introduction of four hypothetical vaccines. The vaccines protect against either low, medium or high prevlence serotypes as well as serotypes included in PCV13, or all serotypes. The vaccine efficacy against each serotype is assumed to be 50%, and coverage is 100%.