| Literature DB >> 29099848 |
Johnie Rose1,2, Laura Homa2, Sharon B Meropol3,4, Sara M Debanne5, Roger Bielefeld6, Claudia Hoyen3, Mendel E Singer5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Currently, Indian officials are incorporating a domestically manufactured rotavirus vaccine (based on the 116E rotavirus strain) into the country's universal immunization program; this vaccine will cost significantly less than western rotavirus vaccines. Here, we examine the public health impact, cost, and cost-effectiveness of universal vaccination in India using the 116E vaccine. This work will allow comparison of universal 116E vaccination with other approaches to child mortality reduction, shed light on the future burden of rotavirus disease in India, and help stakeholders understand future resource needs.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29099848 PMCID: PMC5669435 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0187446
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Utilization and cost parameters—Estimated values and ranges used in sensitivity analysis.
(ORS = oral rehydration solution).
| Parameter | Value | Range | Comments/Questions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Probability of hospitalization given | |||
| Non-severe infection | 0.0072 | 0.00361, 0.0108 | Calculated based on [ |
| Severe infection | 0.0973 | 0.0487, 0.146 | Calculated based on [ |
| Probability of outpatient care given | |||
| Non-severe infection | 0.141 | 0.0705, 0.212 | Calculated based on [ |
| Severe infection | 0.575 | 0.288, 0.863 | Calculated based on [ |
| Probability of access to ORS at home | 0.26 | 0.06, 0.46 | [ |
| Cost of one dose | 61 | 30.5, 122 | [ |
| Non-vaccine costs per dose (e.g. administration, transport, storage) | 34 | 23, 45 | Calculated based on [ |
| Hospital treatment for rotavirus | |||
| Direct medical | |||
| Paid by patient’s family | 3937 | 2952.8, 4921.3 | [ |
| Subsidized by government | 305 | 228.8, 381.3 | [ |
| Direct non-medical | 64.3 | 48.2, 80.4 | [ |
| Indirect | 0 | [ | |
| Outpatient treatment for rotavirus | |||
| Direct medical | |||
| Paid by patient’s family | 251.6 | 188.7, 314.5 | [ |
| Subsidized by government | 83.9 | 62.9, 104.9 | [ |
| Direct non-medical | 38 | 28.5, 47.5 | [ |
| Indirect | 2.9 | 2.2, 3.6 | [ |
| Oral rehydration solution (per course) | 6 | 5, 12 | [ |
| Discount rates: for costs/benefits | 3% | [ | |
| Vaccine wastage | 10% | [ |
* General formula: p(site | severity) = [p(severity | site) * p(site)] / p(severity)
Disease-related parameters—Estimated values and ranges used in sensitivity analysis.
| Parameter | Value | Range | Source/Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Transmission constant (T) | 5.1 | Calibrated to match incidence rates of first infection at 6, 12, 24, 36 months as reported by Gladstone[ | |
| Efficacy of kth (k = 1, 2, 3) natural infection against any future infection ( | 0.39, 0.52, 0.67 | Low: 0.29, 0.43, 0.59 High: 0.47, 0.59, 0.74 | [ |
| Decreased infectiousness of second infection | 0.5 | 0.3, 0.7 | [ |
| Decreased infectiousness of third, fourth infection | 0.2 | 0, 0.4 | [ |
| Mean duration of infection (days) | 7 | 4, 10 | [ |
| Probability that kth (k = 1, 2, 3, 4) infection will cause symptoms given no vaccination ( | 0.413, 0.349, 0.235, 0.201 | ± 50% | [ |
| Probability that symptoms of kth (k = 1, 2, 3, 4) infection will be severe[ | 0.153, 0.221, 0.233, 0.167 | ± 50% | [ |
| Probability of dying from severe | 0.061 | 0.0305, 0.1220 | Calibrated to match 5-year Indian rotavirus mortality of 1/242 without vaccination[ |
| Waning of protection of maternal antibodies | Protection declines linearly from 100% to 0% between birth and 13 weeks of age | [ |
* Severe infections are defined as those with a Vesikari score > = 11.
Fig 3Highlighted sensitivity analysis results.
a) Model parameters which, when varied over the ranges specified in Tables 1–3, have the greatest impact on rotavirus mortality reduction. The percent reduction in rotavirus mortality is shown on the x-axis. The solid black line indicates the baseline mortality reduction (34.6%). Bounds expressed in percentages (e.g. +/-25%), represent relative percentages. b) Model parameters which, when varied, have the greatest impact on the ICER. The ICER (in Rs) is on the x-axis. The solid black line indicates the baseline ICER (Rs 3,429 per DALY averted).
Vaccine-related parameters–Estimated values and ranges used in sensitivity analysis.
| Parameters | Value | Range4 | Comments/Questions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dose 1 coverage (6 weeks) | 0.88 | 0.66, 1 | [ |
| Dose 2 coverage (10 weeks) | 0.80 | 0.60, 1 | [ |
| Dose 3 coverage (14 weeks) | 0.72 | 0.54, 0.9 | [ |
| Efficacy of vaccine against severe infection ( | 0.536 | 0.35, 0.669 | [ |
| Efficacy of vaccine against symptomatic infection ( | 0.346 | 0.216, 0.453 | [ |
| Efficacy of vaccine against any infection ( | 0.304 | 0.1988, 0.38 | Based on ratio of efficacy of prior natural infection against any infection to efficacy of prior natural infection against severe infection[ |
| Proportion of efficacy ( | 0, 0.82, 0.84, 1 | Low: 0, 0.62, 0.64, 1; High: 0, 1, 1, 1 | [ |
| Annual rate of waning of vaccine efficacy | 0.086 | 0, 0.2 | [ |
| Risk of intussusception | 0.00003 | [ | |
| Case fatality of intussusception | 0.25 | Assumption |
Expected clinical events and utilization in a birth cohort of 100,000 Indian infants followed for 5 years under strategies of no vaccination and vaccination using 116E.
| No vaccination | Vaccination | Change (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rotavirus-related clinical events in a cohort of 100,000 children followed for 5 years | |||
| Any infection | 345,953 | 306,809 | -11.3 |
| Asymptomatic infections | 238,597 | 213,402 | -10.6 |
| Symptomatic infections (including severe) | 107,356 | 93,407 | -13.0 |
| Severe infections | 20,584 | 13,472 | -34.6 |
| Death | 410 | 268 | -34.6 |
| Rotavirus-related utilization in a cohort of 100,000 children followed for 5 years | |||
| Hospitalization | 2,638 | 1,897 | -28.1 |
| Outpatient visits | 24,110 | 18,976 | -21.3 |
| Home treatment using ORS | 21,022 | 18,945 | -9.9 |
Incremental cost-effectiveness of moving to a strategy of universal 116E vaccination.
(ICER = incremental cost-effectiveness ratio); values are per child.
| Mean cost (2014 Rupees) | Marginal cost | Mean DALYs | DALYs Averted | ICER | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No vaccination | 139.0 | — | 1.6399 | — | |
| Vaccination | 277.4 | 138.4 | 1.5995 | 0.0404 |