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Quantitative assessment of the impact of partially protective anti-schistosomiasis vaccines

BACKGROUND: Mass drug administration (MDA) of praziquantel has been the intervention of choice against schistosomiasis but with limited success in interrupting the transmission. The development of anti-Schistosoma vaccines is underway. Our objective is to quantify the population-level impact of anti...

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Autores principales: Alsallaq, Ramzi A., Gurarie, David, Ndeffo Mbah, Martial, Galvani, Alison, King, Charles
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5406007/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28410369
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0005544
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author Alsallaq, Ramzi A.
Gurarie, David
Ndeffo Mbah, Martial
Galvani, Alison
King, Charles
author_facet Alsallaq, Ramzi A.
Gurarie, David
Ndeffo Mbah, Martial
Galvani, Alison
King, Charles
author_sort Alsallaq, Ramzi A.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Mass drug administration (MDA) of praziquantel has been the intervention of choice against schistosomiasis but with limited success in interrupting the transmission. The development of anti-Schistosoma vaccines is underway. Our objective is to quantify the population-level impact of anti-Schistosoma vaccines when administered alone and in combination with mass drug administration (MDA) and determine factors in vaccine design and public health implementation that optimize vaccination role in schistosomiasis control and elimination. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We developed a deterministic compartmental model simulation of schistosomiasis transmission in a high-risk Kenyan community, including stratification by age, parasite burden, and vaccination status. The modeled schistosomiasis vaccines differed in terms of vaccine duration of protection (durability) and three biological efficacies. These are vaccine susceptibility effect (SE) of reducing person’s susceptibility to Schistosoma acquisition, vaccine mortality effect (ME) of reducing established worm burden and vaccine fecundity effect (FE) of reducing egg release by mature worms. We quantified the population-level impact of vaccination over two decades under diverse vaccination schemes (childhood vs. mass campaigns), with different age-targeting scenarios, different risk settings, and with combined intervention with MDA. We also assessed the sensitivity of our predictions to uncertainties in model parameters. Over two decades, our base case vaccine with 80% SE, FE, and ME efficacies, 10 years’ durability, provided by mass vaccination every 10 years, reduced host prevalence, mean intensity, incidence, and patent snail prevalence to 31%, 20 eggs/10-ml sample/person, 0.87 worm/person-year, and 0.74%, from endemic-state values of 71%, 152, 3.3, and 0.98%, respectively. Lower impact was found when coverage did not encompass all potential contaminators, and childhood-only vaccination schemes showed delayed and lower impact. In lower prevalence settings, the base case vaccine generated a proportionately smaller impact. A substantially larger vaccine program effect was generated when MDA + mass vaccination was provided every 5 years, which could be achieved by an MDA-only program only if drug was offered annually. Vaccine impact on schistosomiasis transmission was sensitive to a number of parameters including vaccine efficacies, human contact rates with water, human density, patent snails’ rate of patency and lifespan, and force of infection to snails. CONCLUSIONS: To be successful a vaccine-based control strategy will need a moderately to highly effective formulation combined with early vaccination of potential contaminators and aggressive coverage in repeated rounds of mass vaccination. Compared to MDA-only program, vaccination combined with MDA accelerates and prolongs the impact by reducing the acquisition of new worms and reducing egg release from residual worms.
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spelling pubmed-54060072017-05-14 Quantitative assessment of the impact of partially protective anti-schistosomiasis vaccines Alsallaq, Ramzi A. Gurarie, David Ndeffo Mbah, Martial Galvani, Alison King, Charles PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article BACKGROUND: Mass drug administration (MDA) of praziquantel has been the intervention of choice against schistosomiasis but with limited success in interrupting the transmission. The development of anti-Schistosoma vaccines is underway. Our objective is to quantify the population-level impact of anti-Schistosoma vaccines when administered alone and in combination with mass drug administration (MDA) and determine factors in vaccine design and public health implementation that optimize vaccination role in schistosomiasis control and elimination. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We developed a deterministic compartmental model simulation of schistosomiasis transmission in a high-risk Kenyan community, including stratification by age, parasite burden, and vaccination status. The modeled schistosomiasis vaccines differed in terms of vaccine duration of protection (durability) and three biological efficacies. These are vaccine susceptibility effect (SE) of reducing person’s susceptibility to Schistosoma acquisition, vaccine mortality effect (ME) of reducing established worm burden and vaccine fecundity effect (FE) of reducing egg release by mature worms. We quantified the population-level impact of vaccination over two decades under diverse vaccination schemes (childhood vs. mass campaigns), with different age-targeting scenarios, different risk settings, and with combined intervention with MDA. We also assessed the sensitivity of our predictions to uncertainties in model parameters. Over two decades, our base case vaccine with 80% SE, FE, and ME efficacies, 10 years’ durability, provided by mass vaccination every 10 years, reduced host prevalence, mean intensity, incidence, and patent snail prevalence to 31%, 20 eggs/10-ml sample/person, 0.87 worm/person-year, and 0.74%, from endemic-state values of 71%, 152, 3.3, and 0.98%, respectively. Lower impact was found when coverage did not encompass all potential contaminators, and childhood-only vaccination schemes showed delayed and lower impact. In lower prevalence settings, the base case vaccine generated a proportionately smaller impact. A substantially larger vaccine program effect was generated when MDA + mass vaccination was provided every 5 years, which could be achieved by an MDA-only program only if drug was offered annually. Vaccine impact on schistosomiasis transmission was sensitive to a number of parameters including vaccine efficacies, human contact rates with water, human density, patent snails’ rate of patency and lifespan, and force of infection to snails. CONCLUSIONS: To be successful a vaccine-based control strategy will need a moderately to highly effective formulation combined with early vaccination of potential contaminators and aggressive coverage in repeated rounds of mass vaccination. Compared to MDA-only program, vaccination combined with MDA accelerates and prolongs the impact by reducing the acquisition of new worms and reducing egg release from residual worms. Public Library of Science 2017-04-14 /pmc/articles/PMC5406007/ /pubmed/28410369 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0005544 Text en © 2017 Alsallaq 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Alsallaq, Ramzi A.
Gurarie, David
Ndeffo Mbah, Martial
Galvani, Alison
King, Charles
Quantitative assessment of the impact of partially protective anti-schistosomiasis vaccines
title Quantitative assessment of the impact of partially protective anti-schistosomiasis vaccines
title_full Quantitative assessment of the impact of partially protective anti-schistosomiasis vaccines
title_fullStr Quantitative assessment of the impact of partially protective anti-schistosomiasis vaccines
title_full_unstemmed Quantitative assessment of the impact of partially protective anti-schistosomiasis vaccines
title_short Quantitative assessment of the impact of partially protective anti-schistosomiasis vaccines
title_sort quantitative assessment of the impact of partially protective anti-schistosomiasis vaccines
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5406007/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28410369
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0005544
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