| Literature DB >> 27477823 |
D Champredon1, C E Cameron2, M Smieja3, J Dushoff4.
Abstract
Despite the availability of inexpensive antimicrobial treatment, syphilis remains prevalent worldwide, affecting millions of individuals. Furthermore, syphilis infection is suspected of increasing both susceptibility to, and tendency to transmit, HIV. Development of a syphilis vaccine would be a potentially promising step towards control, but the value of dedicating resources to vaccine development should be evaluated in the context of the anticipated benefits. Here, we use a detailed mathematical model to explore the potential impact of rolling out a hypothetical syphilis vaccine on morbidity from both syphilis and HIV and compare it to the impact of expanded 'screen and treat' programmes using existing treatments. Our results suggest that an efficacious vaccine has the potential to sharply reduce syphilis prevalence under a wide range of scenarios, while expanded treatment interventions are likely to be substantially less effective. Our modelled interventions in our simulated study populations are expected to have little effect on HIV, and in some scenarios lead to small increases in HIV incidence, suggesting that interventions against syphilis should be accompanied with interventions against other sexually transmitted infections to prevent the possibility that lower morbidity or lower perceived risk from syphilis could lead to increases in other sexually transmitted diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Co-infection; HIV; immunization; mathematical modelling; public health; syphilis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27477823 PMCID: PMC5080673 DOI: 10.1017/S0950268816001643
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Infect ISSN: 0950-2688 Impact factor: 2.451
Fig. 1.Solid circles (●) are countrywide HIV and syphilis (antenatal care attendees) prevalence estimates for various countries in sub-Saharan Africa [source: WHO; prevalence was averaged over available reports ranging between 2001 and 2013 (http://apps.who.int/gho/data/node.main.6177?lang=en)]. Large grey squares represent the prevalence chosen for synthetic populations A–C.
Fig. 2.Simulation steps. The model is first run with no sexually transmitted infection (STI) for 50 years in order to reach a steady state in partnership dynamics. Then STIs are introduced and prevalences reach stable values after running the simulation for 30 years. Finally, interventions are introduced and evaluated over a 20-year period.
Synthetic population characteristics
| Synthetic population | Prevalence HIV | Prevalence syphilis | Syphilis baseline treatment | HIV baseline treatment | Percentage risk groups (low/medium/high) | Partnership maximum rates (formation, dissolution) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | 1·5% | 2·0% | Treatment 25% per annum of syphilis + individuals | Treatment (ART) 25% per annum of HIV + individuals | 60/35/5 | 2·0, 0·1 |
| B | 10·0% | 10·0% | Treatment 1% per annum of syphilis + individuals | Treatment (ART) 15% per annum of HIV + individuals | 25/55/20 | 3·1, 0·4 |
| C | 15·0% | 4·0% | Treatment 60% per annum of syphilis + individuals | Treatment (ART) 10% per annum of HIV + individuals | 35/50/15 | 3·1, 0·4 |
ART, Antiretroviral treatment.
Description of the simulated interventions
| Intervention | Label | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Enhanced treatment | TrEnh | Increase baseline mass treatment for syphilis by an additional 30% per annum |
| Vaccination mass | VaxMass | All sexually active individuals are vaccinated at a rate of 10% per annum |
| Vaccination high-risk group | VaxHiRisk | Individuals in the highest risk group are vaccinated at a rate of 20% per annum |
| Vaccination young women | VaxYoung | Women aged ⩽18 years are vaccinated at a rate of 80% per annum |
Fig. 3.Comparing intervention scenarios. The shape represents the median value and the vertical segment the 10–90% quartile range calculated from 30 Monte Carlo simulations. Panels on the left-hand side show final prevalence of HIV and syphilis for all modelled interventions in three synthetic populations. Prevalence is calculated after 20 years of intervention. Right-hand side panels show the relative difference of cumulative mother-to-child syphilis transmission (MTCT) compared to the baseline scenario (horizontal dashed line at 0).