| Literature DB >> 28592303 |
Stefan Flasche1, John Ojal2,3, Olivier Le Polain de Waroux2, Mark Otiende3, Katherine L O'Brien4, Moses Kiti3, D James Nokes3,5, W John Edmunds2, J Anthony G Scott2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The World Health Organisation recommends the use of catch-up campaigns as part of the introduction of pneumococcal conjugate vaccines (PCVs) to accelerate herd protection and hence PCV impact. The value of a catch-up campaign is a trade-off between the costs of vaccinating additional age groups and the benefit of additional direct and indirect protection. There is a paucity of observational data, particularly from low- and middle-income countries, to quantify the optimal breadth of such catch-up campaigns.Entities:
Keywords: Catch-up; Dose efficiency; Impact; PCV; Pneumococcus; Vaccination
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28592303 PMCID: PMC5463405 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-017-0882-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Overview of model parameters
| Model parameters | Contribution | No. of parameters | Prior | Posterior | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Distribution | Mean | SD | Source | Median | CR | ||||
| Study population | Age group size | Fixed | 6 age groups | – | – | – | KHDSS [ | – | – |
| Contact patterns | Fixed | 6 × 6 age groups | – | – | – | KHDSS [ | – | – | |
| Carriage prevalence | Outcome | 2 types × 6 age groups | – | – | – | KHDSS [ | – | – | |
| IPD | Outcome | 2 types × 6 age groups | – | – | – | KHDSS [ | – | – | |
| Observed vaccine coverage | Fixed | 27,040 (weekly age and time) | – | – | – | KHDSS [ | – | – | |
| Transmission dynamics | Clearance rates | Fixed | 2 types × 4 age groups | KHDSS [ | |||||
| VE carriage (toddlers) | Fitted - prior | 1 | Normal | 0.36 | 0.15 | KHDSS [ | 0.56 | 0.41–0.72 | |
| VE IPD (infants) | Fitted - prior | 1 | Normal | 0.80 | 0.1 | [ | 0.86 | 0.67–0.99 | |
| Duration of protection (toddlers) | Fitted - prior | 1 | Normal | 6 years | 3 | [ | 5.50 | 2.05–11.01 | |
| Relative level of infant protection | Fitted - prior | 1 | Normal | 1 | 0.1 | Assumption | 0.97 | 0.78–1.17 | |
| Competition parameter | Fitted - prior | 1 | Log-normal | 0.15 | 0.15 | [ | 0.19 | 0.07–0.44 | |
| Susceptibility to infection | Fitted - no prior | 2 types × 4 age groups | |||||||
| Invasiveness | Fitted - no prior | 2 types × 4 age groups | |||||||
CR Credible range, VE Vaccine efficacy
Fig. 1Model fit to carriage prevalence and IPD incidence (a) and prior and posterior parameter estimates (b). We assumed that serotyping methods would only pick up the predominant serotype and that in case of co-colonisation this was always the vaccine serotype. Points with 95 ` confidence bounds represent data, and lines with ribbons represent median model estimates with 95% credible intervals. In b the grey line indicates the prior density distribution and the bars the posterior sample
Fig. 2The predicted number of cases averted by PCV10 vaccination in Kilifi if introduced with a catch-up campaign in children younger than 5, 2 or 1 year old and without catch-up campaign. Lines represent median estimates and ribbons 95% credible intervals
Fig. 3The predicted number of IPD cases averted by PCV10 vaccination in Kilifi with respect to the number of doses administered. In the dose-efficacy plane (a) the aggregated dose efficiency of the alternative introduction strategies within 10 years after the start of vaccination is shown. Coloured dots and lines represent medians and 95% credible intervals (the number of doses administered is fixed as taken from the health register). b shows the (incremental) number of doses needed to prevent one (additional) case of IPD. Figures for cohort vaccination alone and cohort vaccination in year 10 are presented as absolute values; the catch-up scenarios are presented as incremental values over the next smaller campaign
The impact and efficiency of alternative introduction strategies
| Introduction of PCV via | IPD averted after 10 years | Doses administered | Incremental NVN | NVN |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cohort only | 155 (121–193) | 204,671 | 1321 (1058–1698) | 1321 (1058–1698) |
| + U1 catch-up | 173 (134–216) | 218,089 | 757 (618–973) | 1263 (1012–1623) |
| + U2 catch-up | 189 (147–235) | 224,952 | 412 (296–606) | 1188 (958–1527) |
| + U5 catch-up | 220 (172–270) | 241,546 | 543 (403–763) | 1098 (894–1405) |
The number of vaccine doses needed to prevent a case of IPD (NVN) is used as a measure of efficiency. Incremental NVN refers to the additional number of doses needed to prevent one additional cases of IPD in respect to cohort introduction with the next smaller catch-up