Literature DB >> 33895717

Impact and cost-effectiveness of potential interventions against infant respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) in 131 low-income and middle-income countries using a static cohort model.

Ranju Baral1, Deborah Higgins2, Katie Regan2, Clint Pecenka2.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Interventions to prevent childhood respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) disease are limited and costly. New interventions are in advanced stages of development and could be available soon. This study aims to evaluate the potential impact and cost-effectiveness of two interventions to prevent childhood RSV-a maternal vaccine and a monoclonal antibody (mAb).
DESIGN: Using a static population-based cohort model, we evaluate impact and cost-effectiveness of RSV interventions, from a health systems perspective. The assumed baseline efficacy and duration of protection were higher for the mAb (60%-70% efficacy, protection 6 months) compared with the maternal vaccine (40%-60% efficacy, protection 3 months). Both interventions were evaluated at US$3 and US$5 per dose for Gavi and non-Gavi countries, respectively. A range of input values were considered to explore uncertainty. SETTINGS: 131 low-income and middle-income countries. PARTICIPANTS: Pregnant women and live birth cohorts.
INTERVENTIONS: Maternal vaccine given to pregnant women and mAb given to young infants. PRIMARY AND SECONDARY OUTCOME MEASURES: Disability-adjusted life years averted, severe case averted, deaths averted, incremental cost effectiveness ratios.
RESULTS: Under baseline assumptions, maternal vaccine and mAbs were projected to avert 25% and 55% of RSV-related deaths among infants younger than 6 months of age, respectively. The average incremental cost-effectiveness ratio per disability-adjusted life year averted was US$1342 (range US$800-US$1866) for maternal RSV vaccine and US$431 (range US$167-US$692) for mAbs. At a 50% gross domestic product per capita threshold, maternal vaccine and mAbs were cost-effective in 60 and 118 countries, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: Both interventions are projected to be impactful and cost-effective in many countries, a finding that would be enhanced if country-specific Gavi cofinancing to eligible countries were included. mAbs, with assumed higher efficacy and duration of protection, are expected to be more cost-effective than RSV maternal vaccines at similar prices. Final product characteristics will influence this finding. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.

Entities:  

Keywords:  health economics; paediatrics; respiratory infections

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Year:  2021        PMID: 33895717      PMCID: PMC8074564          DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-046563

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMJ Open        ISSN: 2044-6055            Impact factor:   2.692


This is one of the first studies to examine the potential impact and cost-effectiveness of maternal vaccines and monoclonal antibodies for respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) prevention, across 131 low-income and middle-income countries. This study compares products with uncertain characteristics using the latest available data on vaccine characteristics, supplemented by the target product profile to inform the model parameters. A range of input values were considered to explore uncertainty, insights from which are useful to inform subsequent intervention development. Final product characteristics and product prices will determine the relative cost-effectiveness of RSV interventions.

Introduction

Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a common cause of acute lower respiratory illness (ALRI) among children younger than age 5, causing between 41 000 and 118 000 child deaths per year globally.1 2 RSV disease is most severe among young infants, and the burden is highest in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs), where more than 99% of RSV deaths occur.2 Emerging evidence indicates the unrecognised burden of RSV among children in low-resource settings is also significant, with up to 10% of young infant deaths attributable to RSV infection.3 4 Existing RSV interventions are limited and cost prohibitive, even in high-income countries.5 Several prophylactic interventions are currently under development.6 7 Multiple maternal vaccine candidates designed to protect against RSV illness in infants are in relatively advanced stages of development and expected to be available for global use in the coming years.6 Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) are available and in use for high-risk babies in high-income countries. However, the available mAbs are not only expensive but require multiple doses during the RSV season. Long-lasting more affordable mAbs that are easier to deliver in low-resource settings are in advanced stages of development.8 Given the extent of the global RSV disease burden—especially in low-income countries (LICs)—and the lack of efficacious and cost-effective therapeutic options, these new interventions are expected to be included in Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance’s, portfolio,9 subject to licensure, prequalification and cost characteristics. In this paper, we estimate the potential impact and cost-effectiveness of a maternal vaccine and a mAb, both designed to avert RSV disease burden in young infants in LMICs. We compare each intervention against a scenario of no intervention and against each other. Results from this study illustrate the potential benefits of these products and will help inform decisions around further development. This analysis will also inform global and LMIC decision-makers likely to face choices about whether and which interventions to introduce.

Methods

We examined the potential impact and cost-effectiveness of a single-dose RSV maternal vaccine administered to pregnant women at 24–36 weeks gestation, and of a single-dose mAb given to infants directly at birth across 131 LMICs, compared with no intervention. Both interventions were evaluated independently using a static cohort model. For maternal vaccine, infants born 2 weeks following maternal immunisation were considered as protected to allow time for immune transfer from mother to children. All children receiving mAbs were considered protected immediately. We examined the impact and cost of interventions from the health systems perspective over the period 2030–2039 (10 years), assuming nationwide introduction in 2030. Primary input values for a baseline scenario are given in table 1. Key model outputs include cases averted, severe cases averted, hospitalisations averted, deaths averted, disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) averted and the incremental cost per DALY averted due to RSV interventions. Given the lack of country-specific cost-effectiveness thresholds across LMICs, we used a willingness-to-pay threshold of 0.5 times the gross domestic product (GDP) per capita in each country.10 Results are summarised by WHO regions, World Bank income group, and Gavi eligibility to understand impact by country group. All monetary units are adjusted to 2016 US dollars.
Table 1

Key input parameter values used for modelling

InputRSV maternal vaccineRSV mAbSources
Intervention-specific inputs
Target population126 million(annual average number of pregnant women, between 2030 and 2039, across 131 countries)124 million(annual average live births between 2030 and 2039, across 131 countries)Birth estimates and population growth rate;15 stillbirth rates14
Intervention scheduleSingle-dose vaccine given during weeks 24–36 of gestation, as a part of ANCSingle-dose mAb given to newborn at birthWHO23 and ClinicalTrials.gov;24 expert opinion
Efficacy against RSV endpointsBaseline: cases=40.9%; hospitalisation=41.7%; death=59.6%Minimum scenario: 30% (for all endpoints)Maximum scenario: 90% (for all endpoints)Baseline: cases=60%; hospitalisation=60%; death=70%Minimum scenario: 30% (for all endpoints)Maximum scenario: 90% (for all endpoints)Novavax, Inc11 and WHO,23 25 expert opinion
Duration of protection against RSV*Baseline: 3 monthsMinimum scenario: 4 monthsMaximum scenario: 6 monthsBaseline: 6 monthsMinimum scenario: 4 monthsMaximum scenario: 6 monthsWHO;23 25 expert opinion
Efficacy against all-cause LRTI†Cases=25%; hospitalisation=25%; death=39%Cases=25%; hospitalisation=25%; death=39%Novavax, Inc;11 expert opinion
Duration of protection against all-cause LRTI†6 months6 monthsNovavax, Inc;11 expert opinion
Intervention coverageDerived from ANC coverage (average 84%, range: 40%–96%, in 2030)Derived from BCG coverage (average 82%, range: 48%–98%, in 2030)Demographic and Health Surveys,16 UNICEF17 and WHO18 20
Common to both interventions
Disease burden
 Incidence of RSV-ALRICountry-specific incidence for 0–5 years for envelope (35.3–65.6).Developing-country estimate by narrow age band for case distribution by age.Shi et al2
Annual incidence per 1000 children
0–27 days40.0
28 to <3 months45.7
3–5 months99.6
6–11 months98.8
12–23 months79.1
Rescaled to match country-specific incidence envelope
 Incidence of severe RSV-ALRIDeveloping-country estimates with uniform age distributionShi et al2
Annual incidence of severe RSV-ALRI per 1000 children
0–5 months36.1
6–11 months24.7
0–59 months10.2
 Hospital admissions for RSV-associated ALRIAnnual hospital admissions for RSV-associated ALRI per 1000 childrenShi et al2
0–5 months20.2
6–11 months11
 Hospital case fatalityHospital case fatality risk (%), by age groupShi et al2
0–5 months2.2
6–11 months2.4
 RSV-ALRI mortalityHospital deaths 2.2 (adjusted for community deaths) 0.9 (adjusted for influenza activities)Shi et al2
 Incidence of all-cause LRTICountry-specific;By ages: early neonates (0–7 days), post neonates (7–28 days), late neonates (1–12 months); burden for post neonates, uniformly distributed across ages by monthIHME12
 Incidence of severe LRTI11.5% of all incidence resulting in severe casesAssumed (based on the estimates used in Rudan et al13)
 Hospital admissions for LRTI40% of all severe cases resulting in hospital admissionsAssumed
 Mortality due to LRTICountry specific, early neonates, post neonates, late neonates; burden for post neonates uniformly distributed across ages by monthIHME12
 Age distribution of LRTIAssumes uniform distribution of burden across months by ageAssumed
Costs
 Intervention costUS$3 per dose in Gavi countries; US$5 per dose in non-Gavi countriesAssumed
 Intervention delivery costsMean incremental economic cost of delivery per dose: US$0.63 in LICs; US$1.73 in LMICs and UMICsImmunization Costing Action Network29
 Treatment costCost of managing severe pneumonia in LMICs (outpatients US$53; inpatients US$250)Zhang et al36
 Vaccine introduction datesNational introduction starting 2030Product development timeline, assumed
Other assumptions
 DALY weightsSevere ALRI=0.21; non-severe ALRI=0.053IHME37
 Duration of illnessSevere ALRI=10 days; non-severe ALRI=5 daysGraham and Anderson38
 Length of hospital stayLength of stay for severe pneumonia in LMICs, 6.4 daysZhang et al36
 Healthcare seekingHealth seeking for children with pneumonia, country specificWHO39

*Duration of protection in the minimum scenario is higher than in the baseline scenario. For maternal vaccine baseline, we assume duration of protection data from a recent clinical trial that failed to meet the primary endpoint. Nonetheless, in anticipation that a successful product would likely have higher duration of protection than 3 months, we evaluate the minimum scenario at 4 months duration of protection.

†Used in adjunct scenario only. The adjunct scenario evaluates intervention impact on all-cause LRTI mortality.

ALRI, acute lower respiratory illness; ANC, antenatal care; DALY, disability-adjusted life year; LICs, low-income countries; LMIC, low-income and middle-income country; LRTI, lower respiratory tract infection; mAb, monoclonal antibody; RSV, respiratory syncytial virus; UMIC, upper-middle-income country.;

Key input parameter values used for modelling *Duration of protection in the minimum scenario is higher than in the baseline scenario. For maternal vaccine baseline, we assume duration of protection data from a recent clinical trial that failed to meet the primary endpoint. Nonetheless, in anticipation that a successful product would likely have higher duration of protection than 3 months, we evaluate the minimum scenario at 4 months duration of protection. †Used in adjunct scenario only. The adjunct scenario evaluates intervention impact on all-cause LRTI mortality. ALRI, acute lower respiratory illness; ANC, antenatal care; DALY, disability-adjusted life year; LICs, low-income countries; LMIC, low-income and middle-income country; LRTI, lower respiratory tract infection; mAb, monoclonal antibody; RSV, respiratory syncytial virus; UMIC, upper-middle-income country.;

Disease burden

Disease burden inputs including disease incidence, severe disease incidence, incidence of hospitalisations and mortality were derived from a comprehensive systematic review paper.2 We combined country-specific disease incidence estimates in children under 5 years of age with a representative developing-country estimate to generate incidence by granular age band in each country. To generate incidence of severe disease, hospitalisation and hospital mortality, we used developing-country estimates.2 Estimated hospital deaths were adjusted by multiplying by 1.98 to account for community deaths and influenza coinfection.2 The actual values of disease burden inputs are given in table 1. Some RSV interventions under development have shown promising results in their ability to avert all-cause lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs) among children,11 in addition to RSV infection. Thus, we also explored the potential impact of both RSV interventions on all-cause LRTI, based on emerging burden data, using estimates from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2017,12 and assuming a uniform distribution of disease among children 1–12 months of age. Further, we assumed 11.5% of all-cause LRTI cases would result in severe cases13 and 40% of all severe cases would result in hospitalisation.

Intervention introduction and coverage

The leading RSV intervention candidates could be available for use in the next 5–8 years.7 We assumed both interventions would be available by 2030 and all countries would begin national introduction in 2030. All pregnant women attending antenatal care (ANC) visits were assumed eligible to receive RSV maternal vaccine. To project the number of pregnant women per country, we added country-specific stillbirths14 to the United Nations Population Division annual birth projections.15 We estimated maternal vaccine coverage during the 24-week to 36-week vaccination window by examining country-specific ANC first-visit timing,16 country-specific ANC coverage17 and the WHO’s recommended ANC timing based on the focused ANC model guideline.18 Details on methods used in estimating maternal vaccine coverage during ANC within a specific gestation window is described elsewhere.19 All live births were considered eligible for mAbs. All infants were assumed to be covered at the BCG vaccine birth dose coverage levels adjusted to the timeliness of vaccine receipt. Country’s overall BCG coverage were derived from the most recent WHO/UNICEF estimates of national immunisation coverage.20 Timeliness of BCG birth dose receipt was derived using the methods described in the literature.21 22 Coverage levels for both interventions for each country are projected to improve by 3 percentage points each year until coverage reaches 70%, and after that by 1 percentage point each year until reaching 95% coverage. This projection was made to correspond with methods applied during the Gavi vaccine investment strategy.9

Intervention characteristics

Our analysis assumed a single-dose maternal RSV vaccine would be given to pregnant women between 24 and 36 months of gestation, inferred based on the WHO preferred product characteristics (PPCs)23 and other ongoing clinical trials.24 We based vaccine efficacy and duration of protection on data from one of the first maternal vaccine candidate phase III clinical trials (table 1).11 Other maternal vaccines are in clinical development which may have improved efficacy. Given the uncertainty in vaccine characteristics, scenario analyses included a range in efficacy (30% to 90%) and duration of protection afforded to infants (3–6 months). Our analysis assumed a single-dose mAb would be given to newborns at birth, would have 60%–70% efficacy, and would offer protection for 6 months, inferred based on the PPCs25 and other studies.26 27 As with the maternal vaccine, we varied efficacy and duration of protection in scenario analysis. We assumed neither intervention contributed to herd immunity, and that efficacy did not wane during the period of protection.

Intervention price and delivery costs

For both interventions, we assumed a per-dose price of US$3 in Gavi-eligible countries and per-dose price of US$5 in LMICs not eligible for Gavi support. Traditionally mAbs are more expensive to produce than a vaccine and will likely have higher market price than a vaccine. If Gavi decides to support RSV interventions once they are available, Gavi-eligible countries would likely be able to access the interventions at varying prices depending on their transition status.28 We refrained from projecting individual country Gavi eligibility or intervention prices due to significant uncertainty, and instead evaluated a range of intervention prices in sensitivity analyses. Given the paucity of data on maternal immunisation and mAb delivery costs in LMICs, we used delivery cost estimates for other vaccines derived from the Immunization Costing Action Network repository.29 Unit costs of delivering RSV interventions were US$0.63 for LICs and US$1.73 for LMICs. We accounted for vaccine/mAbs wastage at 5% and a buffer stock at 25% of demand in the introduction year, and at 25% of the incremental demand in subsequent years.

Health service costs

Very few studies have analysed the cost of managing RSV in children, especially in LMICs.30–35 Hospitalisation costs also vary widely. In Bangladesh, for example, hospitalisation averages US$74, whereas in China it averages US$662. Given limited RSV-specific information in LMICs, we used the average cost of treating pneumonia in young children, identified in a systematic review36 as US$53.26 and US$250.04 per outpatient and inpatient episode, respectively. We assumed that severe cases seek inpatient care and non-severe cases seek outpatient care.

Cost-effectiveness analysis

We calculated intervention costs by multiplying the number of doses (estimated number of pregnant women receiving vaccine for maternal vaccine and estimated number of live births for mAbs) with the unit cost of delivery and cost per dose. We estimated averted healthcare costs by multiplying the estimated number of non-severe/severe cases averted by the costs of an outpatient/inpatient episode. Vaccine impact was calculated by multiplying the respective disease burden in children born 2 weeks after maternal vaccination with vaccine efficacy. The mAb impact was calculated by multiplying disease burden with the BCG coverage estimates and mAb efficacy. We estimated health outcomes including severe/non-severe cases averted, hospitalisations averted, deaths averted and DALYs averted for each country and year. Disability weights for non-severe and severe ALRI were used to compute DALYs.37 Further, we assumed duration of illness at 5 days for non-severe disease and 10 days for severe disease.38 The length of a hospital stay for severe disease was assumed to be 6.4 days.36 Both undiscounted and discounted DALYs (at 3% discount rate) were generated for the analysis. We also accounted for variation in health-seeking practices by using healthcare use data from children younger than 5 years receiving pneumonia care.39 We calculated incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) for each country by dividing the net cost of intervention by the net DALYs averted by the intervention.

Sensitivity analysis

We conducted one-way sensitivity analysis by changing the values of key input parameters, including intervention efficacy, duration of protection, anticipated coverage and intervention price. Alternate scenarios that changed one or more input parameters to evaluate results sensitivity were also considered. In an adjunct scenario, we evaluated how different interventions show impact on all-cause LRTI mortality, using the efficacy and duration of protection values as suggested by recent clinical trial data,11 and disease burden for all-cause LRTI from the 2017 Global Burden of Disease Study.12

Patient and public involvement

Patients were not included in this modelling study.

Results

Disease burden without interventions

Over the 10-year period, about 41.94 million non-severe cases, 15.28 million severe cases, 11.48 million hospitalisations and 504 963 deaths among children younger than 6 months of age in 131 LMICs are projected (table 2). Seventy-three Gavi-eligible countries accounted for 70% of the mortality burden. Most deaths would occur in sub-Saharan Africa (36%, 47 countries), followed by South Asia (26%, 8 countries).
Table 2

Summary of disease burden, impact and cost-effectiveness ratios, with and without intervention (2030–2039), baseline scenario

Country group byNDisease burden without interventionBurden averted and ICER with RSV maternal vaccineBurden averted and ICER with RSV mAb
Non-severe casesSevere casesHospitalisationsDeathsNon-severe casesSevere casesHospitalisationsDeathsICER per DALY avertedNon-severe casesSevere casesHospitalisationsDeathsICER per DALY averted
Gavi status
Gavi7331 288 67710 683 1068 031 827352 9902 159 6301 730 1641 333 54583 024107313 866 7994 742 0223 565 171182 800315
Non-Gavi5810 657 9474 599 3913 457 938151 973819 749907 088699 14943 52816815 610 5982 441 9211 835 89894 133577
World Bank income group
LIC3410 823 8693 562 1722 678 130117 701760 348577 452445 07827 7109494 774 0831 573 1991 182 77160 645257
LMIC4622 502 8897 872 0295 918 389260 1071 559 5491 292 990996 58862 046131110 083 8923 536 6602 658 950136 334428
UMIC518 619 8673 848 2962 893 246127 155659 482766 809591 02736 79616314 619 4222 074 0841 559 34879 954551
WHO geographic region
EAP205 313 2353 097 9722 329 133102 363314 036582 849449 23827 96914112 570 4161 558 9121 172 02960 094479
ECA202 609 512633 363476 17820 928244 307125 41796 666601814251 398 536337 329253 61213 004437
LAC232 583 4641 024 279770 07933 844209 296204 837157 881982915071 349 631536 105403 05720 666507
MENA132 907 7321 058 521795 82334 976222 211192 789148 594925115661 468 837535 629402 69920 648532
SA812 207 8914 018 8533 021 474132 791842 810643 028495 62230 85711385 628 4271 857 4161 396 45271 601342
SSA4716 324 7905 449 5094 097 078180 0621 146 719888 332684 69342 62811697 061 5512 358 5541 773 22090 920359
Total13141 946 62415 282 49711 489 765504 9632 979 3792 637 2522 032 693126 552134219 477 3977 183 9435 401 069276 933431

DALY, disability-adjusted life year; EAP, East Asia & Pacific; ECA, Europe & Central Asia; ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; LAC, Latin America & Caribbean; LIC, low-income country; LMIC, low-income and middle-income country; MENA, Middle East & North Africa; RSV, respiratory syncytial virus; SA, South Asia; SSA, Sub-Saharan Africa; UMIC, upper-middle-income country.

Summary of disease burden, impact and cost-effectiveness ratios, with and without intervention (2030–2039), baseline scenario DALY, disability-adjusted life year; EAP, East Asia & Pacific; ECA, Europe & Central Asia; ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; LAC, Latin America & Caribbean; LIC, low-income country; LMIC, low-income and middle-income country; MENA, Middle East & North Africa; RSV, respiratory syncytial virus; SA, South Asia; SSA, Sub-Saharan Africa; UMIC, upper-middle-income country.

Expected health outcomes with intervention

RSV maternal vaccine, under the baseline scenario, has the potential to avert 2.97 million non-severe cases, 2.63 million severe cases, 2.03 million hospitalisations, 126 552 deaths and 3.73 million DALYs (discounted) among children younger than 6 months of age across all countries over 10 years (table 2). Globally, about 17% of severe RSV cases and 25% of RSV-related deaths among infants under 6 months of age would be averted by RSV maternal vaccine, which is roughly 13 deaths averted per 100 000 vaccinated pregnant women. An RSV mAb, under the baseline scenario, is expected to avert 19.47 million cases of non-severe disease, 7.18 million severe cases, 5.40 million hospitalisations, 276 933 deaths and 8.19 million DALYs (discounted) among children younger than 6 months of age across all countries over 10 years (table 2). Globally, about 55% of RSV deaths among infants younger than 6 months of age would be averted with RSV mAbs—equivalent to approximately 28 averted deaths per 100 000 newborns receiving the intervention. Under alternative scenarios using varying efficacy and duration of protection assumptions (minimum and maximum scenarios), the RSV maternal vaccine is estimated to avert between 84 934 and 356 346 deaths over 10 years; and the RSV mAb is expected to avert roughly 84 864 and 356 057 deaths. Assuming both interventions are able to affect all-cause LRTI, as suggested by recent clinical trial data,11 either intervention is projected to avert roughly 1.05 million LRTI deaths (29% of all LRTI deaths) among children younger than 6 months of age in LMICs.

Cost-effectiveness of interventions

The average annual cost of vaccination programmes across all countries for the duration of analysis was estimated to be about US$546.36 million and US$538.40 million for RSV maternal vaccine and mAbs, respectively. The economic benefits expressed in terms of cost-of-care averted was about US$602.10 million (maternal vaccine) and US$1.97 billion (mAbs) over the 10 years (see online supplemental table 1). For maternal RSV vaccine, the ICER per DALY averted is estimated at US$1342 (US$1073 across Gavi-eligible countries and US$1681 across non-Gavi countries). Similarly, the ICER estimates for RSV mAbs is US$431 (US$315 across Gavi-eligible countries and US$577 across non-Gavi countries). It is important to note these ICERs reflect the full potential cost of either intervention. Countries eligible for Gavi support would be expected to pay a share of the prices used in this analysis, thus reducing the ICER from the country perspective. Results from alternative scenarios with low and high efficacy and duration of protection assumptions show that costs per DALY averted across countries range from US$244–US$1982 (maternal vaccine) and US$239–US$1958 (mAbs). By reducing the intervention price to 50% of the baseline price (ie, US$1.50 for Gavi-eligible countries and US$2.50 for non-Gavi countries), the average ICER per DALY averted would decline to US$781 (range US$45–US$1147) for the maternal vaccine and US$178 (range US$42–US$1132) for the mAb. Increasing the intervention price by 200% of the baseline price, the average ICER per DALY averted increases to US$2465 (range US$642–US$3651) for the maternal vaccine and US$938 (range US$632–US$3610) for the mAbs. When comparing ICERs against an individual country’s income level at baseline, the maternal vaccine ICERs were <50% of the GDP per capita in 60 countries (12 Gavi and 48 non-Gavi), suggesting intervention cost-effectiveness in those countries. ICERs for RSV mAbs were below the 50% GDP per capita threshold in 118 countries (62 Gavi-eligible and all non-Gavi). For both interventions, countries with higher ICER to GDP per capita ratios are concentrated in sub-Saharan Africa and Asia (figures 1 and 2). Many of these countries remain eligible for Gavi support and are expected to pay lower intervention prices. As a result, the cost per DALY averted from the perspective of these countries is likely to be much more favourable than shown here. For example, if each of the original Gavi-eligible countries were responsible for half of the cost of the intervention (US$1.50), which is still a relatively high cost as the countries with the lowest GDP per capita would pay only a fraction of that price under Gavi’s current cofinancing model, then the ICER for the RSV maternal vaccine and mAb would fall below the 50% GDP per capita threshold in 46% (maternal vaccine) and 100% (mAb) of these countries. Further, maternal vaccine ICERs across countries at base price are roughly equivalent to the mAb ICER evaluated at 300% of the base price. Online supplemental table 2 includes a comparison of ICERs as a share of country GDP for alternative intervention scenarios. ICERs as a percentage of national GDP per capita, maternal vaccine. GDP, gross domestic product; ICERs, incremental cost-effectiveness ratios. ICERs as a percentage of national GDP per capita, monoclonal antibody. GDP, gross domestic product; ICERs, incremental cost-effectiveness ratios.

Discussion

Both RSV interventions are projected to be impactful across all countries under baseline assumptions. A maternal vaccine is projected to avert 12 650 deaths and mAbs roughly two times more (27 690 deaths averted) annually among children younger than 6 months of age. We note that our baseline assumptions for the maternal vaccine draw from a phase III trial in which the primary endpoints were not met. As a result, maternal vaccine assumptions may be conservative compared with mAb assumptions, leading to lower overall impact of RSV maternal vaccines. Under alternative scenarios that consider both interventions with similar characteristics, we observe no substantial variation in impact. Under a minimal (30% efficacy and 4 months protection) and maximal (90% efficacy and 6 months protection) intervention characteristics scenario, both interventions are projected to avert roughly 84 900 and 356 000 deaths among children younger than 6 months of age across 131 countries, suggesting that efficacy and duration of protection are primary parameters for determining impact, reinforced by a similar study.27 Unknowns around intervention delivery strategy and potential coverage implications create uncertainties; this is especially true for a novel intervention like a maternal vaccine. To further understand the potential implications of unknown parameters on a maternal vaccine impact, we evaluated the marginal gains in impact by incrementally changing the parameter values to mimic those used in the mAb baseline scenario. When changing maternal vaccine coverage assumptions to the mAb coverage values, the maternal vaccine would prevent 22 000 additional deaths. Similarly, when changing both duration of protection and efficacy for maternal vaccine at baseline to the mAb baseline equivalent, maternal vaccine would avert an additional 150 000 deaths. As seen in figure 3, the duration of protection is the most important factor for increasing impact (109 000 additional deaths averted).
Figure 3

Impact of change in key input parameter values on deaths averted. mAb, monoclonal antibody.

Impact of change in key input parameter values on deaths averted. mAb, monoclonal antibody. The cost per DALY averted under the baseline scenario for a maternal vaccine is more than three times that for mAbs (US$1342 vs US$431). This is mainly driven by the modest vaccine efficacy and assumed duration of protection for the maternal vaccine as compared with mAbs. Under the maximum and minimum scenarios with high and low vaccine efficacy and duration of protection assumptions, the difference in the estimated ICERs between the two interventions is muted (figure 4).
Figure 4

Average incremental cost-effectiveness ratios by country groups. DALY, disability-adjusted life year; mAb, monoclonal antibody.

Average incremental cost-effectiveness ratios by country groups. DALY, disability-adjusted life year; mAb, monoclonal antibody. Though it did not meet the primary endpoint, the recent phase III maternal vaccine trial shows promising impact on all-cause LRTI mortality.11 If both future RSV interventions reduce all-cause LRTI mortality, our adjunct scenario shows more pronounced impact by averting more than a million all-cause LRTIs during the 10-year period. ICER estimates under this scenario were US$896 for the maternal vaccine (range US$34–US$7602) and US$889 for the mAb (range US$33–US$7608) per DALY averted across all countries, with 116 countries (69 Gavi-eligible and 47 non-Gavi countries) demonstrating ICERs <50% of their respective GDP per capita. We refrained from directly comparing these estimates to other scenarios as they use data sources12 not comparable with the primary disease burden data2 used in other scenarios. There are several additional limitations worth citing. There is a dearth of RSV disease burden data, especially regarding the age distribution of disease in young infants in LMICs. Although we used the best published estimates of RSV disease burden in children,2 the literature is expanding rapidly. For example, studies from Zambia40 and Argentina41 highlight that community mortality and deaths from RSV could be as high as 10% and 11% of all-cause deaths occurring among infants up to 6 months of age. This highlights a large and underappreciated burden of RSV and would mean our estimates of impact and effectiveness are conservative. Although we attempted to quantify the potential benefits of RSV interventions with additional scenario analysis, lack of consistent input data coupled with poorly established age distribution limits the comparability of our results across these scenarios. Collecting more granular data on disease burden is critical to inform future studies.27 The products evaluated in this study are not yet available in the market, so other key parameters are unknown. We assumed the same price for both interventions, which may not hold, as historical evidence suggests mAbs are likely to be more expensive to produce than a vaccine.5 This could have considerable impact on the ICERs and comparisons between products. Nonetheless, our analysis shows that the mAb is more cost-effective than a maternal vaccine at baseline efficacy and duration of protection values, until a mAb reaches approximately three times the baseline price assumption. Gavi evaluated both interventions for inclusion in its 2018 Vaccine Investment Strategy in anticipation of the potential benefits, and they are expected to be included in the Gavi portfolio, subject to licensure, prequalification and affordability. In that case, the eligible Gavi countries would benefit from a considerable subsidy for access and affordability, especially the countries with the lowest GDPs per capita. Further, the <50% of GDP per capita thresholds used in this paper are non-specific measures of cost-effectiveness, especially when intervention prices to be paid by individual Gavi-supported countries are not yet known. Country-specific thresholds are recommended42 but often do not exist for most LMICs. In the absence of country-specific thresholds, we used a conservative metric uniform across all countries to define cost-effectiveness. Lastly, RSV infection is seasonal in many countries. We did not consider seasonal delivery in this analysis. Seasonal intervention could potentially be a more cost-effective yet feasible strategy,26 especially when using mAbs to selectively immunise children before the start of the RSV season. Delivering maternal vaccine seasonally to pregnant woman in LMICs may be more challenging due to the lack of a defined maternal vaccine delivery strategy. Future research should explore the feasibility of alternative delivery strategies.

Conclusions

RSV interventions evaluated in this study are projected to be impactful and cost-effective across many LMICs. Under the assumptions used, mAbs are comparatively more impactful and cost-effective than RSV maternal vaccines. However, we reiterate the uncertainty around several critical parameters that inform this finding. The emerging evidence of RSV’s role in all LRTI deaths among young infants suggests our analyses of RSV burden averted may prove conservative and enhance the attractiveness of RSV interventions as important tools for curbing LRTI mortality in infants. As disease burden shifts toward neonates and very young children, RSV maternal immunisation and mAbs offer the opportunity to protect young infants from disease. As RSV interventions complete clinical development and the intervention characteristics and market prices becomes more definitive, future analysis will provide additional clarity on the anticipated health and economic impacts of these interventions.
  19 in total

1.  Estimates of the global, regional, and national morbidity, mortality, and aetiologies of lower respiratory tract infections in 195 countries: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2015.

Authors: 
Journal:  Lancet Infect Dis       Date:  2017-08-23       Impact factor: 25.071

2.  Clinical characteristics and direct medical cost of respiratory syncytial virus infection in children hospitalized in Suzhou, China.

Authors:  Tao Zhang; Qiuli Zhu; Xuelan Zhang; Yunfang Ding; Mark Steinhoff; Steven Black; Genming Zhao
Journal:  Pediatr Infect Dis J       Date:  2014-04       Impact factor: 2.129

3.  Cost of hospitalization for respiratory syncytial virus chest infection and implications for passive immunization strategies in a developing nation.

Authors:  P W K Chan; M E A Abdel-Latif
Journal:  Acta Paediatr       Date:  2003-04       Impact factor: 2.299

4.  Burden of respiratory syncytial virus in hospitalized infants and young children in Amman, Jordan.

Authors:  Najwa Khuri-Bulos; John V Williams; Asem A Shehabi; Samir Faouri; Ehsan Al Jundi; Omar Abushariah; Qingxia Chen; S Asad Ali; Sten Vermund; Natasha B Halasa
Journal:  Scand J Infect Dis       Date:  2010-05

5.  Epidemiology and etiology of childhood pneumonia in 2010: estimates of incidence, severe morbidity, mortality, underlying risk factors and causative pathogens for 192 countries.

Authors:  Igor Rudan; Katherine L O'Brien; Harish Nair; Li Liu; Evropi Theodoratou; Shamim Qazi; Ivana Lukšić; Christa L Fischer Walker; Robert E Black; Harry Campbell
Journal:  J Glob Health       Date:  2013-06       Impact factor: 4.413

Review 6.  Cost of management of severe pneumonia in young children: systematic analysis.

Authors:  Shanshan Zhang; Peter M Sammon; Isobel King; Ana Lucia Andrade; Cristiana M Toscano; Sheila N Araujo; Anushua Sinha; Shabir A Madhi; Gulam Khandaker; Jiehui Kevin Yin; Robert Booy; Tanvir M Huda; Qazi S Rahman; Shams El Arifeen; Angela Gentile; Norberto Giglio; Mejbah U Bhuiyan; Katharine Sturm-Ramirez; Bradford D Gessner; Mardiati Nadjib; Phyllis J Carosone-Link; Eric Af Simões; Jason A Child; Imran Ahmed; Zulfiqar A Bhutta; Sajid B Soofi; Rumana J Khan; Harry Campbell; Harish Nair
Journal:  J Glob Health       Date:  2016-06       Impact factor: 4.413

7.  Cost-effectiveness thresholds: pros and cons.

Authors:  Melanie Y Bertram; Jeremy A Lauer; Kees De Joncheere; Tessa Edejer; Raymond Hutubessy; Marie-Paule Kieny; Suzanne R Hill
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  2016-09-19       Impact factor: 9.408

8.  Health and economic burden of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) disease and the cost-effectiveness of potential interventions against RSV among children under 5 years in 72 Gavi-eligible countries.

Authors:  Xiao Li; Lander Willem; Marina Antillon; Joke Bilcke; Mark Jit; Philippe Beutels
Journal:  BMC Med       Date:  2020-04-06       Impact factor: 8.775

9.  Challenges and opportunities for respiratory syncytial virus vaccines.

Authors:  Barney S Graham; Larry J Anderson
Journal:  Curr Top Microbiol Immunol       Date:  2013       Impact factor: 4.291

Review 10.  Stillbirths: rates, risk factors, and acceleration towards 2030.

Authors:  Joy E Lawn; Hannah Blencowe; Peter Waiswa; Agbessi Amouzou; Colin Mathers; Dan Hogan; Vicki Flenady; J Frederik Frøen; Zeshan U Qureshi; Claire Calderwood; Suhail Shiekh; Fiorella Bianchi Jassir; Danzhen You; Elizabeth M McClure; Matthews Mathai; Simon Cousens
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2016-01-19       Impact factor: 79.321

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  1 in total

1.  WHO preferred product characteristics for monoclonal antibodies for passive immunization against respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) disease in infants - Key considerations for global use.

Authors:  Erin Sparrow; Ifedayo Adetifa; Nathorn Chaiyakunapruk; Thomas Cherian; Deshayne B Fell; Barney S Graham; Bruce Innis; David C Kaslow; Ruth A Karron; Harish Nair; Kathleen M Neuzil; Samir Saha; Peter G Smith; Padmini Srikantiah; Fred Were; Heather J Zar; Daniel Feikin
Journal:  Vaccine       Date:  2022-02-17       Impact factor: 4.169

  1 in total

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