| Literature DB >> 24968002 |
Ann Levin1, Susan A Wang2, Carol Levin3, Vivien Tsu4, Raymond Hutubessy2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In November 2011, the GAVI Alliance made the decision to add HPV vaccine as one of the new vaccines for which countries eligible for its funding (less than $1520 per capita income) could apply to receive support for national HPV vaccination, provided they could demonstrate the ability to deliver HPV vaccines. This paper describes the data and analysis shared with GAVI policymakers for this decision regarding GAVI HPV vaccine support. The paper reviews why strategies and costs for HPV vaccine delivery are different from other vaccines and what is known about the cost components from available data that originated primarily from HPV vaccine delivery costing studies in low and middle income-countries.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24968002 PMCID: PMC4072768 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0101114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Qualitative comparison of Introduction and Recurrent Costs of PCV, Yellow Fever Vaccine, and HPV Vaccine.
| Pneumococcal Vaccine(routine, healthfacility) | Yellow FeverVaccine(campaign) | HPV Vaccine(periodic school-based) | HPV Vaccine(periodic integratedcampaign) | HPV Vaccine(routine healthfacility) | |
|
| |||||
|
| Baseline | + | ++ | ++ | ++ |
|
| Baseline | = | + | = | = |
|
| Baseline | + | ++ | ++ | ++ |
|
| Baseline | + | + | + | = |
|
| |||||
|
| Baseline | + | + | + | + |
|
| Baseline | = | = | = | = |
|
| Baseline | ++ | +++ | ++ | + |
|
| Baseline | = | ++ | + | + |
|
| Baseline | ++ | +++ | + | + |
|
| Baseline | = | = | = | = |
Note: = means equal, + means small increase in costs, ++ means medium increase in costs, and +++ means large increase in costs.
Assumptions made in HPV Vaccination Cost Analysis.
| Variable | Assumption |
|
| Defined either one single year of age cohort of girls between nine and thirteen years old or one single school grade cohort of girls |
|
| 3 dose schedule administered during the course of 6 months |
|
| Percent of target population that gets the first dose but not the second dose or percent of target population that get the second dose but not the third dose |
|
| Number of girls fully vaccinated divided by the total girls in the designated age group or grade |
|
| Micro-planning, IEC/social mobilization, training, and purchase of cold chain storage/equipment. |
|
| Routine social mobilization and IEC, refresher training, service delivery (outreach per diems, transport), monitoring and evaluation, supervision, and waste management |
*Definition of dropout rates is from Bos (2000). Using Immunization Coverage Rates for Monitoring Health Sector Performance: Measurement and Interpretation Issues”, August 2000 HNP Discussion Paper. World Bank.
Financial costs for HPV vaccine introduction and delivery in pilot projects in selected countries.
| Country | Tanzania(LSHTM pilot project)Age-basedarm | Tanzania(LSHTM pilot project)Grade-basedarm | Uganda(PATH HPVvaccinedemonstrationproject) | Uganda(PATH HPVvaccinedemonstrationproject) | India-AP(PATH HPVvaccinedemonstrationproject) | India-Gujarat(PATH HPVvaccinedemonstrationproject) | Peru(not GAVI eligible)(PATH HPVvaccinedemonstrationproject) | Vietnam(PATH HPVvaccinedemonstrationproject) | Vietnam(PATH HPVvaccinedemonstrationproject) |
| T1 | T2 | U1 | U2 | I1 | I2 | P1 | V1 | V2 | |
|
| US$ 2011 | US$ 2011 | US$ 2009 | US$ 2009 | US$ 2009 | US$ 2009 | US$ 2009 | US$ 2009 | US$ 2009 |
|
| Girls born in 1998 | Primary 6 | 10 yrs | P5/10 yrs | 10 yrs | 10 yrs | 10 yrs | 10 yrs | 10 yrs |
|
| 2,180 | 3,352 | 2,263 | 3,459 | 14,533 | 12,636 | 8,092 | 1,890 | 1,205 |
|
| Periodic School-based | Periodic School-based | Outreach | Periodic School-based | Periodic Schoolbasedin three rounds andoutreach AngawadiCenter (AWC) | Monthly in schools &Angawadi Center(implemented as periodicin practice) | Periodic School based | Periodic School based | Health center based |
|
| 82%/72% | 86%/79% | 73.4%/52.6% | 96.8%/90.5% | Urban 79.2%/77.2%Rural 89.6%/87.8%Tribal 86.2%/83.9% | Urban 70.1%/68.4%Rural 84.2%/83.3%Tribal 81.7%/74.4% | 83.9%/82.6% | 96.8%/96.1% | 99.1%/98.6% |
|
| $6.09 | $6.09 | $6.61 | $6.70 | $1.49 | $2.19 | $11.45 | $18.94 | $18.44 |
|
| $5.64 | $3.69 | $0.56 | $1.24 | $0.32 | $0.36 | $0.63 | $0.46 | $0.42 |
|
| $13.08 | $9.18 | $3.45 | $3.97 | $1.00 | $1.05 | $1.90 | $1.42 | $1.46 |
*Vaccine coverage across projects are not directly comparable since denominators for Tanzania projects only included school-enrolled girls and not all girls living in a district. Others are based on population-based coverage surveys.
**Introduction/initial investment costs include training, IEC/social mobilization, and other capital costs such as additional cold chain storage.
***Recurrent costs per fully immunized girl = [cost per dose×(total # of doses 1+doses 2+doses 3 delivered)]/number of girls who received three doses (as a function of coverage and dropout from one to three doses).
Costs of Pilot Projects by Country Characteristics.
| Countrycharacteristics | Country | IntroductionCosts | Recurrent costs perfully immunizedgirl | Comments |
|
| India AP; periodic school basedand periodic health center-based(PATH project) | $1.49 | $1.00 | Costs were likely lower due toeconomies of scaleand integrated services |
| India Gujarat; Routine –periodic school-based andperiodic health center(PATH project) | $2.19 | $1.05 | ||
|
| Vietnam; Periodicschool based(PATH project) | $18.94 | $1.42 | Start-up costs were likelyhigher due to resource intensity andtraining and social mobilizationactivities are not integrated |
| Vietnam; RoutineHealth center based(PATH project) | $18.44 | $1.46 | ||
|
| Tanzania; Periodic School-based (LSHTM project) | $9.69 | $15.69 | Costs were likelyhigher due to fewereconomies of scale |
| Uganda; PeriodicIntegrated Outreach(PATH project) | $6.61 | $3.45 | ||
| Uganda; PeriodicSchool based(PATH project) | $6.70 | $3.97 | ||
|
| Peru; PeriodicSchool based(PATH project) | $11.45 | $1.90 | Costs of start-up were likelyhigh due to intensive training andsocial mobilization. |
*Integrated with Child Days Plus for doses 1 and 3.
Financial costs of scaling-up HPV vaccine delivery in Tanzania, Uganda and Bhutan.
| Tanzania (C4P costing tool | Tanzania (C4P costing tool | Uganda (financial assessment to scale up from bridging study) | Bhutan national introduction with catch-up (based on expenditure data and 90% coverage) | Average costs from prior four columns (not weighted by population) | |
|
| Projected | Projected | Projected | Actual | |
|
| US$ 2011 | US$ 2011 | US$ 2011 | US$ 2010 | |
|
| 10 yrs | 10 yrs | 10 yrs | 12–18 yrs | |
|
| 605,000 | 605,000 | 675,270 | 47,888 | |
|
| Periodicschool-based | Periodic healthfacility based | Periodic Integratedoutreach | Periodic school-based | |
|
| $3.07 | $3.07 | $2.82 | $3.02 | $2.99 |
|
| $1.59 | $1.17 | $1.27 | $1.50 | $1.38 |
|
| $4.78 | $3.51 | $3.81 | $4.56 | $4.17 |
*The C4P tool is the WHO Cervical Cancer Prevention and Control Costing Tool.
**Uganda’s estimate is the introduction cost per girl for scaling up to all districts, following the demonstration project–where there was already an investment in start-up activities.
***Estimates for Bhutan were obtained from available country expenditure data from the national introduction with catch-up vaccination rather than from a full costing through the collection of resource and cost data. Costs would probably vary upon switching to a national vaccination of a single cohort per year through facility-based services.
****The calculation of cost per eligible girl divides the costs of the program with full coverage (100%) by the total number of girls in the target population.
Ranges of Introduction and Recurrent costs for different scenarios.
| Pilot Project(n = 7) | Pilot Project(n = 2) | Scaling-upHPV vaccine(n = 3) | Scaling-upHPV vaccine(n = 1) | |
|
| LSHTM 2 arms, PATH Uganda,India 2 arms, Peru, Vietnam | Uganda Child DaysPlus, Vietnam | Tanzania C4P, Uganda,Bhutan | Tanzania C4P |
|
| School based periodic ordelivered monthly (India) | Health center/periodic | School based | Health Facility |
|
| $1.49–$18.94 | $6.61–$18.44 | $3.13–$5.15 | $5.15 |
|
| $0.32–$5.64 | $0.42–$0.56 | $1.27–$1.67 | $1.12 |
|
| $1.00–$13.08 | $1.46–$3.45 | $4.23–$5.81 | $5.27 |
Note: Recurrent costs per fully immunized girl = [cost per dose×(total # of doses 1+doses 2+doses 3 delivered)]/number of girls who received three doses (as a function of coverage and dropout from one to three doses).