| Literature DB >> 32270372 |
Michele R Wilson1, Matthew D Wasserman2, Marie-Claude Breton3, Francois Peloquin3, Stephanie R Earnshaw1, Cheryl McDade1, Heather L Sings4, Raymond A Farkouh4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: A model was developed to estimate the historical impact (including total societal health and economic benefit) of pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV) programs in the overall Canadian population between 2005 and 2015, inclusively.Entities:
Keywords: Acute otitis media; Children vaccination; Pneumococcal disease; Pneumococcal vaccination; Pneumonia; Public health impact
Year: 2020 PMID: 32270372 PMCID: PMC7237628 DOI: 10.1007/s40121-020-00294-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Dis Ther ISSN: 2193-6382
Fig. 1Model illustration. The figure above illustrates the approach to estimating the historical economic impact of PCV programs in Canada. We take observed incidence from 2001 to 2015, as represented by the blue area in the graph. The area in blue from 2005 to 2015 represents the observed incidence during the PCV era. To estimate the hypothetical “no PCV program” scenario, we then take incidence prior to implementation of PCV programs (2001–2004) and assume this to be steady-state incidence. The area in purple then represents the estimated cases averted because of PCV programs from 2005 to 2015
Fig. 2Historical epidemiologic data (incidence per 100,000), 2001–2015. a Invasive pneumococcal disease incidence per 100,000 by age group, 2001–2015. Disease incidence obtained from TIBDN [41]. b Acute otitis media incidence for ages < 5 years, 2001–2015. Historical incidence of all-cause AOM is only available from 1996 to 2008 [6]. These data were used to forecast incidence of all-cause AOM from 2009 to 2015. The trend in all-cause AOM from 2005 to 2008 showed a similar reduction as seen in the UK following PCV7 introduction. The forecasted incidence of all-cause AOM in 2014 was benchmarked against UK observational data to avoid overestimation of impact due to vaccination with PCV13 [24]. Italicized numbers represent forecasted data. Data assumed similar for 2015 as 2014. c Non-hospitalized pneumonia incidence by age group, 2001–2015. Incidence estimated based on the ratio of hospitalized to non-hospitalized pneumonia [42]. d Hospitalized pneumonia: 2004–2014 Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI) Discharge Abstract database. Data assumed similar for 2015 as 2014 [22]
Age-specific input parameters
| Parameter (source) | Age range (years) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| < 2 | 2–4 | 5–17 | 18–34 | 35–49 | 50–64 | ≥ 65 | |
| Current population [ | 776,370 | 1,161,631 | 5,015,400 | 8,324,245 | 7,184,090 | 7,599,967 | 5,786,907 |
| Percentage of IPD presenting as meningitis [ | 9.8% | 9.8% | 8.6% | 5.3% | 5.3% | 5.3% | 3.2% |
| Direct costs in Canadian dollarsa,b | |||||||
| Bacteremia [ | $19,385 | $19,385 | $19,385 | $33,242 | $33,242 | $33,242 | $23,513 |
| Meningitis [ | $41,348 | $41,348 | $41,348 | $44,198 | $44,198 | $44,198 | $24,137 |
| Hospitalized pneumonia [ | $7356 | $7356 | $7356 | $11,020 | $11,020 | $11,020 | $10,443 |
| Nonhospitalized pneumonia [ | $122 | $122 | $122 | $122 | $122 | $122 | $122 |
| Acute otitis media [ | $170 | $170 | $170 | – | – | – | – |
| Hours of lost productivity per case | |||||||
| Bacteremiac | 61.11 | 61.11 | 61.11 | 88.36 | 90.06 | 90.06 | 82.71 |
| Meningitisc | 99.25 | 99.25 | 99.25 | 120.87 | 122.22 | 122.22 | 79.95 |
| Hospitalized pneumoniac | 39.98 | 39.98 | 39.98 | 52.95 | 53.76 | 53.76 | 62.95 |
| Nonhospitalized pneumoniad | 6.89 | 6.89 | 6.89 | 4.59 | 4.59 | 4.59 | 4.59 |
| Acute otitis mediae | 6.89 | 6.89 | 6.89 | – | – | – | – |
| Case fatality rates | |||||||
| Bacteremia [ | 0.012 | 0.012 | 0.012 | 0.078 | 0.078 | 0.12 | 0.291 |
| Meningitis [ | 0.09 | 0.09 | 0.09 | 0.078 | 0.078 | 0.12 | 0.308 |
| Hospitalized pneumonia [ | 0.012 | 0.012 | 0.012 | 0.041 | 0.041 | 0.059 | 0.147 |
IPD invasive pneumococcal disease
aAll costs were adjusted to 2018 values
bThe health data branch includes all resources used in the hospital but not physician costs, which are paid by the jurisdiction
cBacteremia, meningitis, and hospitalized pneumonia: lost productivity based on length of stay in the hospital [10] + additional 5 days
dNon-hospitalized pneumonia: 1 work day lost for persons aged 18-64 years, 1.5 work days lost for parents, and 1 day lost for caregivers in persons aged ≥ 65 years
eAcute otitis media: 1.5 work days lost for parents. Percentage of population participating in the workforce (64.9%) [20] and average hours worked per week (35.4) [10, 20, 21]
Base-case results: observed and projected pneumococcal disease cases with and without a PCV IIP, 2005–2015
| Parameter | With PCV IIP | Without PCV IIP | Incremental |
|---|---|---|---|
| Outcomes | |||
| Cases of: | |||
| Bacteremia | 26,492 | 40,020 | − 13,528 |
| Meningitis | 2864 | 4326 | − 1462 |
| Non-hospitalized pneumonia | 1,765,364 | 2,448,240 | − 682,876 |
| Hospitalized pneumonia | 690,705 | 743,529 | − 52,824 |
| AOM | 12,218,367 | 15,916,360 | − 3,697,993 |
| Deaths | 80,762 | 87,393 | − 6631 |
| Among those < 5 years | 755 | 1008 | − 253 |
| Among those > 5 years | 80,007 | 86,385 | − 6377 |
| Costs (in $ millions) | |||
| Direct medical costs | $11,001.2 | $11,770.8 | − $769.5 |
| Vaccine-related costs | $833.9 | $0.0 | $833.9 |
| IPD costs | $810.3 | $1200.8 | − $390.5 |
| Pneumonia costs | $7286.0 | $7872.0 | − $586.0 |
| AOM costs | $2071.1 | $2697.9 | − $626.8 |
| Indirect costs | $4070.6 | $5061.1 | − $990.5 |
| Total costs | $15,071.9 | $16,831.9 | − $1760.0 |
AOM acute otitis media, IIP infant immunization program, IPD invasive pneumococcal disease, PCV pneumococcal conjugate vaccine
Costs presented in 2018 Canadian dollars
Scenario analyses: total costs ($ millions)
| Scenario | With PCV IIP | Without PCV IIP | Incremental |
|---|---|---|---|
| Base case | 15,072 | 16,832 | − 1760 |
| Average IPD incidence from 2001 to 2004 used as baseline | 15,072 | 16,668 | − 1596 |
| 2001 IPD incidence used as baseline | 15,072 | 16,771 | − 1700 |
| 2004 IPD incidence used as baseline | 15,072 | 16,583 | − 1511 |
| Including AOM for 5–9 year olds | 16,572 | 19,182 | − 2610 |
| No incremental AOM incidence reduction after 2008 | 15,072 | 15,643 | − 571 |
| Only 25% of pneumonia and 50% of AOM decline attributed to PCV IIP | 10,686 | 12,055 | − 1370 |
| Vaccination rate set to 90% for all years | 15,176 | 16,832 | − 1656 |
| IPD incidence based on weighted average of Quebec and Ontario data | 15,316 | 17,125 | − 1809 |
| Exclusion of indirect costs | 11,001 | 11,771 | − 770 |
Costs presented in 2018 Canadian dollars. Base case assumed the following: maximum historical IPD incidence (per 100,000) from 2001 to 2004 for the setting without PCV IIP (35.97 for < 5 years; 3.22 for 5–17 years; 4.29 for 18–49 years; 13.12 for 50–64 years; 33.72 for 65+ years); 80% vaccination rate for all years; IPD incidence from TIBDN only; incremental reduction in AOM incidence throughout the PCV era; 50% of pneumonia decline change and 100% of AOM decline due to PCV IIP introduction; indirect costs considered
For the scenario in which we assume the 2001 incidence for IPD, the incidence rates per age group were: 31.46 for < 5 years; 3.09 for 5–17 years; 4.00 for 18–49 years; 13.12 for 50–64 years; 30.70 for 65+ years
For the scenario in which we assume 2004 incidence for IPD, the incidence rates per age group were: 25.9 for < 5 years; 1.52 for 5–17 years; 3.48 for 18–49 years; 11.53 for 50–64 years; 26.72 for 65 + years
For the scenario in which we assume the average IPD incidence (per 100,000) from 2001 to 2004, the incidence rates were: 31.46 for < 5 years; 2.33 for 5–17 years; 3.78 for 18–49 years; 10.95 for 50–64 years; 30.33 for 65+ years
AOM acute otitis media, IIP infant immunization program, IPD invasive pneumococcal disease, PCV pneumococcal conjugate vaccine
Fig. 3Economic impact breakdown. The waterfall graph above illustrates the estimated historical economic impact of PCV programs in Canada. The red bar represents the estimated total vaccination cost of PCVs. The subsequent green bars represent the estimated direct medical cost savings due to reductions in cases of IPD, pneumonia, and AOM as well as the indirect costs avoided related to the reductions in cases. The blue bar represents the overall cost savings associated with PCV programs, summing the costs of vaccination with the cost savings from cases averted
| Pneumococcal vaccinations have been a part of the routine infant vaccination program throughout Canada since 2005. |
| The objective of this study was to estimate the historical public health and economic impact of infant pneumococcal vaccine programs in Canada between 2005 and 2015. |
| PCV programs were estimated to have saved 6631 lives and averted 14,990 IPD cases, 735,700 pneumonia episodes, and 3,697,993 AOM episodes. |
| Canadian PCV programs have provided significant health benefits and resulted in a substantial value for money and a net savings over the reviewed period of approximately $1.76 billion. |