| Literature DB >> 28743299 |
A Wilder-Smith1,2,3, I Longini4, P L Zuber5, T Bärnighausen6, W J Edmunds7, N Dean4, V Masserey Spicher8, M R Benissa9, B D Gessner10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Assessments of vaccine efficacy and safety capture only the minimum information needed for regulatory approval, rather than the full public health value of vaccines. Vaccine efficacy provides a measure of proportionate disease reduction, is usually limited to etiologically confirmed disease, and focuses on the direct protection of the vaccinated individual. Herein, we propose a broader scope of methods, measures and outcomes to evaluate the effectiveness and public health impact to be considered for evidence-informed policymaking in both pre- and post-licensure stages. DISCUSSION: Pre-licensure: Regulatory concerns dictate an individually randomised clinical trial. However, some circumstances (such as the West African Ebola epidemic) may require novel designs that could be considered valid for licensure by regulatory agencies. In addition, protocol-defined analytic plans for these studies should include clinical as well as etiologically confirmed endpoints (e.g. all cause hospitalisations, pneumonias, acute gastroenteritis and others as appropriate to the vaccine target), and should include vaccine-preventable disease incidence and 'number needed to vaccinate' as outcomes. Post-licensure: There is a central role for phase IV cluster randomised clinical trials that allows for estimation of population-level vaccine impact, including indirect, total and overall effects. Dynamic models should be prioritised over static models as the constant force of infection assumed in static models will usually underestimate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the immunisation programme by underestimating indirect effects. The economic impact of vaccinations should incorporate health and non-health benefits of vaccination in both the vaccinated and unvaccinated populations, thus allowing for estimation of the net social value of vaccination.Entities:
Keywords: Cluster randomised controlled trial; Dynamic modelling; Effectiveness; Overall effectiveness; Post-licensure; Pre-licensure; Public health impact; Quasi-experiments; Vaccine efficacy; Vaccine-preventable disease incidence
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28743299 PMCID: PMC5527440 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-017-0911-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Fig. 1Value chain of vaccines
Fig. 2Types of vaccine effectiveness, as developed by Halloran et al. [34]. Cluster 1 has a fraction of the population vaccinated, while cluster 2 has no person vaccinated. The u and v indices designate vaccinated and unvaccinated people, respectively. Direct effectiveness compares the attack rate (AR) (or some other rate measure, e.g. incidence) of vaccinated to unvaccinated people within a cluster, as in cluster 1. Indirect effectiveness compares the AR in unvaccinated people in the partially vaccinated cluster 1 to the AR in an unvaccinated cluster 2. Total effectiveness compares the AR of vaccinated people in cluster 1 to the AR in cluster 2. Finally, overall effectiveness compares the AR among all people in cluster 1 (i.e. vaccinated and unvaccinated) to the AR among all people in cluster 2
Public Health impact of vaccines related to health outcomes
| Health-related evaluations of impact of vaccines | Conventional evaluations | Additional ‘broader’ evaluations |
|---|---|---|
| Methods |
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| Measures | Efficacy and effectiveness | Vaccine preventable disease incidence |
| Outcomes | Morbidity and mortality at individual level | All-cause mortality |
Public health impact of vaccines related to non-health outcomes
| Non-health related evaluations of impact of vaccines | Traditional evaluations | Additional ‘broader’ evaluations |
|---|---|---|
| Methods | Cost-effectiveness analysis, informed by clinical trials and costing studies | Extended cost effectiveness analysis, informed by quasi-experiments |
| Measures and outcomes | Healthcare cost savings | Outcome- and behaviour-related productivity gains |