| Literature DB >> 30727971 |
Christophe Sauboin1, Katsiaryna Holl2,3, Paolo Bonanni4, Anne A Gershon5, Bernd Benninghoff6, Stephane Carryn7, Margaret A Burgess8, Peter Wutzler9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A controversy exists about the potential effect of childhood varicella vaccination on Herpes Zoster (HZ) incidence. Mathematical models projected temporary HZ incidence increase after vaccine introduction that was not confirmed by real-world evidence. These models assume that absence of contacts with infected children would prevent exogenous boosting of Varicella-Zoster-Virus (VZV) immunity and they do not include an endogenous VZV immunity-boosting mechanism following asymptomatic VZV reactivation. This study aims to explore the effect of various assumptions on exogenous and endogenous VZV immunity-boosting on HZ incidence in the general population after introduction of routine childhood varicella vaccination.Entities:
Keywords: Boosting; Herpes zoster; Vaccination; Varicella; Viral infection
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30727971 PMCID: PMC6366068 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-019-3759-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.667
Fig. 1Model Structure [3, 4, 6]. Adapted from Ouwens et al. [43]. Addition of e(a) parameter to the model structure. Under public license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Model parameters
| Parameter | Description | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Demographic parameters | |||
| Birth rate | Fraction of annual birth cohort out of total French population | 0.01295 | INSEE, |
| Biological parameters | |||
| σ | Latent period of varicella (average duration: 14 days) | 26.07 | Brisson et al. [ |
| α | Infectious period of varicella (average duration: 7 days) | 52.14 | Brisson et al. [ |
| δ | Waning natural immunity (average duration: 10 years) | 0.1 | Expert opinion |
| g * λ (a) | Exogenous boosting against zoster | Brisson et al. [ | |
| < 50 years | 75% * λ | ||
| 50–64 years | 71%* λ | ||
| > 65 years | 50%* λ | ||
| Vaccine parameters | |||
| mmr1 | Coverage of first dose of MMR | 90% | |
| mmr2 | Coverage of second dose of MMR | 80% | |
| Dose1 | Age at first vaccination (in months) | 12 | Assumption |
| Dose2 | Age at second vaccination (in months) | 18 | Assumption |
| Introduction time | Number of years before maximum vaccination coverage is reached | 3 | Assumption |
| Tv | Varicella vaccine efficacy (% successfully vaccinated and temporarily protected) | 65% | Prymula et al. [ |
| P | Varicella vaccine failures (%) | 5% | Prymula et al. [ |
| 1-Tv-P | Varicella vaccine-recipients partially protected (%) | 30% | 100%-Tv-P |
| Wv1 | Waning rate for 1 dose of varicella vaccine (duration 17 years) | 0.0588 | Silverman et al. [ |
| Wv2 | Waning rate for 2 doses of varicella vaccine (lifelong protection) | 1e− 6 | Expert opinion |
| Ki * λ (a) | Rate of exogenous boosting | 0.91 * λ (a) | Brisson et al. [ |
| h | Relative VZV reactivation after varicella vaccination | 0.167 | Brisson et al. [ |
| b * λ (a) | Rate of infection among vaccinated susceptibles | 0.73 * λ (a) | Brisson et al. [ |
| m | Relative infectiousness of infected vaccine-recipients versus non-vaccine-recipients | 0.5 | Brisson et al. [ |
Note: MMR measles, mumps and rubella, MMVR measles, mumps, rubella, and varicella, INSEE National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies (Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques), VZV varicella zoster virus, WHO World Health Organization
Base-case and sensitivity analyses
| Description | French coverage | |
|---|---|---|
| Base case analysis | Vaccination coverage of MMR dose 1 and 2 | Dose 1: 90%; Dose 2: 80% |
| Time for replacement (MMR by MMRV) | 3 years | |
| Catch-up program | No catch-up | |
| Exogenous/endogenous boosting | Included and relative weighting depends on scenario | |
| Contact matrix | Empirical | |
| Vaccine protection | Post-dose 1: 17 years; Post-dose 2: lifelong protection | |
| Sensitivity analysis | Waning natural immunity (average duration 10 years – base case) changed to 2 and 20 years | bc: δ = 0.1 |
| Reactivation rate of infectious zoster, by age group for δ = 0.1 | ||
| 0–4 years | 0.028 | |
| 5–9 years | 0.009 | |
| 10–14 years | 0.0068 | |
| 15–24 years | 0.0035 | |
| 25–44 years | 0.0033 | |
| 45–64 years | 0.008 | |
| ≥65+ years | 0.016 | |
| Reactivation rate of infectious zoster, by age group for δ = 0.5 | ||
| 0–4 years | 0.00769 | |
| 5–9 years | 0.00339 | |
| 10–14 years | 0.00326 | |
| 15–24 years | 0.00227 | |
| 25–44 years | 0.00256 | |
| 45–64 years | 0.00646 | |
| ≥65+ years | 0.01387 | |
| Reactivation rate of infectious zoster, by age group for δ = 0.05 | ||
| 0–4 years | 0.05478 | |
| 5–9 years | 0.01666 | |
| 10–14 years | 0.01183 | |
| 15–24 years | 0.00548 | |
| 25–44 years | 0.00453 | |
| 45–64 years | 0.01035 | |
| ≥65+ years | 0.01991 | |
δ, waning natural immunity (average duration 10 years), bc base case (scenario), MMR measles, mumps, and rubella, MMRV measles, mumps, rubella, and varicella
Pre-vaccination HZ incidence by age group
| All ages | < 5 y | 5-9y | 10-14y | 15-24y | 25-44y | 45-64y | ≥65y |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3.96 | 1.03 | 1.69 | 2.33 | 1.87 | 1.87 | 2.12 | 9.09 |
y years of age
Base-case scenario and sensitivity analysis results
| HZ incidence parameters | Exogenous-Endogenous (%) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 100–0 | 75–25 | 50–50 | 25–75 | 0–100 | |
| 2-year immunity to HZ scenario | |||||
| Decrease in HZ by year 80 (%) | 63.6 | 63.8 | 64.0 | 64.2 | 64.4 |
| Number of years with HZ increase above pre-vaccine rate | 3 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
| Max HZ increase (%) above pre-vaccine rate | 1.3 | 0.8 | 0.3 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| Year at max HZ increase | 3 | 3 | 2 | 2 | NA |
| 10-year immunity to HZ scenario (base case) | |||||
| Decrease in HZ by year 80 (%) | 62.1 | 63.1 | 64.0 | 64.8 | 65.6 |
| Number of years with HZ increase above pre-vaccine rate | 21 | 10 | 3 | 2 | 0 |
| Max HZ increase (%) above pre-vaccine rate | 3.7 | 1.8 | 0.8 | 0.2 | 0.0 |
| Year at max HZ increase | 9 | 4 | 3 | 2 | NA |
| 20-year immunity to HZ scenario | |||||
| Decrease in HZ by year 80 (%) | 60.1 | 61.8 | 63.3 | 64.7 | 66.0 |
| Number of years with HZ increase above pre-vaccine rate | 33 | 23 | 9 | 3 | 1 |
| Max HZ increase (%) above pre-vaccine rate | 5.7 | 2.6 | 1.0 | 0.9 | 0.8 |
| Year at max HZ increase | 19 | 9 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
HZ herpes zoster, NA not available
Fig. 2Trend in post-vaccination HZ incidence by scenario. HZ, herpes zoster; V, varicella
Fig. 3Maximum HZ increase, in full and partial exogenous boosting, by age groups and immunity scenarios. bc, base case (scenario); HZ, herpes zoster; y, years (of immunity).); YOA, years of age