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Optimizing Tactics for Use of the U.S. Antiviral Strategic National Stockpile for Pandemic Influenza

In 2009, public health agencies across the globe worked to mitigate the impact of the swine-origin influenza A (pH1N1) virus. These efforts included intensified surveillance, social distancing, hygiene measures, and the targeted use of antiviral medications to prevent infection (prophylaxis). In add...

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Autores principales: Dimitrov, Nedialko B., Goll, Sebastian, Hupert, Nathaniel, Pourbohloul, Babak, Meyers, Lauren Ancel
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3023704/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21283514
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0016094
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author Dimitrov, Nedialko B.
Goll, Sebastian
Hupert, Nathaniel
Pourbohloul, Babak
Meyers, Lauren Ancel
author_facet Dimitrov, Nedialko B.
Goll, Sebastian
Hupert, Nathaniel
Pourbohloul, Babak
Meyers, Lauren Ancel
author_sort Dimitrov, Nedialko B.
collection PubMed
description In 2009, public health agencies across the globe worked to mitigate the impact of the swine-origin influenza A (pH1N1) virus. These efforts included intensified surveillance, social distancing, hygiene measures, and the targeted use of antiviral medications to prevent infection (prophylaxis). In addition, aggressive antiviral treatment was recommended for certain patient subgroups to reduce the severity and duration of symptoms. To assist States and other localities meet these needs, the U.S. Government distributed a quarter of the antiviral medications in the Strategic National Stockpile within weeks of the pandemic's start. However, there are no quantitative models guiding the geo-temporal distribution of the remainder of the Stockpile in relation to pandemic spread or severity. We present a tactical optimization model for distributing this stockpile for treatment of infected cases during the early stages of a pandemic like 2009 pH1N1, prior to the wide availability of a strain-specific vaccine. Our optimization method efficiently searches large sets of intervention strategies applied to a stochastic network model of pandemic influenza transmission within and among U.S. cities. The resulting optimized strategies depend on the transmissability of the virus and postulated rates of antiviral uptake and wastage (through misallocation or loss). Our results suggest that an aggressive community-based antiviral treatment strategy involving early, widespread, pro-rata distribution of antivirals to States can contribute to slowing the transmission of mildly transmissible strains, like pH1N1. For more highly transmissible strains, outcomes of antiviral use are more heavily impacted by choice of distribution intervals, quantities per shipment, and timing of shipments in relation to pandemic spread. This study supports previous modeling results suggesting that appropriate antiviral treatment may be an effective mitigation strategy during the early stages of future influenza pandemics, increasing the need for systematic efforts to optimize distribution strategies and provide tactical guidance for public health policy-makers.
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spelling pubmed-30237042011-01-31 Optimizing Tactics for Use of the U.S. Antiviral Strategic National Stockpile for Pandemic Influenza Dimitrov, Nedialko B. Goll, Sebastian Hupert, Nathaniel Pourbohloul, Babak Meyers, Lauren Ancel PLoS One Research Article In 2009, public health agencies across the globe worked to mitigate the impact of the swine-origin influenza A (pH1N1) virus. These efforts included intensified surveillance, social distancing, hygiene measures, and the targeted use of antiviral medications to prevent infection (prophylaxis). In addition, aggressive antiviral treatment was recommended for certain patient subgroups to reduce the severity and duration of symptoms. To assist States and other localities meet these needs, the U.S. Government distributed a quarter of the antiviral medications in the Strategic National Stockpile within weeks of the pandemic's start. However, there are no quantitative models guiding the geo-temporal distribution of the remainder of the Stockpile in relation to pandemic spread or severity. We present a tactical optimization model for distributing this stockpile for treatment of infected cases during the early stages of a pandemic like 2009 pH1N1, prior to the wide availability of a strain-specific vaccine. Our optimization method efficiently searches large sets of intervention strategies applied to a stochastic network model of pandemic influenza transmission within and among U.S. cities. The resulting optimized strategies depend on the transmissability of the virus and postulated rates of antiviral uptake and wastage (through misallocation or loss). Our results suggest that an aggressive community-based antiviral treatment strategy involving early, widespread, pro-rata distribution of antivirals to States can contribute to slowing the transmission of mildly transmissible strains, like pH1N1. For more highly transmissible strains, outcomes of antiviral use are more heavily impacted by choice of distribution intervals, quantities per shipment, and timing of shipments in relation to pandemic spread. This study supports previous modeling results suggesting that appropriate antiviral treatment may be an effective mitigation strategy during the early stages of future influenza pandemics, increasing the need for systematic efforts to optimize distribution strategies and provide tactical guidance for public health policy-makers. Public Library of Science 2011-01-19 /pmc/articles/PMC3023704/ /pubmed/21283514 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0016094 Text en Dimitrov et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Dimitrov, Nedialko B.
Goll, Sebastian
Hupert, Nathaniel
Pourbohloul, Babak
Meyers, Lauren Ancel
Optimizing Tactics for Use of the U.S. Antiviral Strategic National Stockpile for Pandemic Influenza
title Optimizing Tactics for Use of the U.S. Antiviral Strategic National Stockpile for Pandemic Influenza
title_full Optimizing Tactics for Use of the U.S. Antiviral Strategic National Stockpile for Pandemic Influenza
title_fullStr Optimizing Tactics for Use of the U.S. Antiviral Strategic National Stockpile for Pandemic Influenza
title_full_unstemmed Optimizing Tactics for Use of the U.S. Antiviral Strategic National Stockpile for Pandemic Influenza
title_short Optimizing Tactics for Use of the U.S. Antiviral Strategic National Stockpile for Pandemic Influenza
title_sort optimizing tactics for use of the u.s. antiviral strategic national stockpile for pandemic influenza
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3023704/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21283514
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0016094
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