Cargando…

Could a Shigella vaccine impact long-term health outcomes?: Summary report of an expert meeting to inform a Shigella vaccine public health value proposition, March 24 and 29, 2021

Shigellosis is a leading cause of diarrhea and dysentery in young children from low to middle-income countries and adults experiencing traveler’s diarrhea worldwide. In addition to acute illness, infection by Shigella bacteria is associated with stunted growth among children, which has been linked t...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Bagamian, Karoun H., Puett, Chloe, Anderson, John D., Muhib, Farzana, Pecenka, Clint, Behrman, Jere, Breiman, Robert F., Edoka, Ijeoma, Horton, Susan, Kang, Gagandeep, Kotloff, Karen L., Lanata, Claudio F., Platts-Mills, James A., Qadri, Firdausi, Rogawski McQuade, Elizabeth T., Sudfeld, Christopher, Vonaesch, Pascale, Wierzba, Thomas F., Scheele, Suzanne
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9551074/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36237199
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jvacx.2022.100218
_version_ 1784806015833735168
author Bagamian, Karoun H.
Puett, Chloe
Anderson, John D.
Muhib, Farzana
Pecenka, Clint
Behrman, Jere
Breiman, Robert F.
Edoka, Ijeoma
Horton, Susan
Kang, Gagandeep
Kotloff, Karen L.
Lanata, Claudio F.
Platts-Mills, James A.
Qadri, Firdausi
Rogawski McQuade, Elizabeth T.
Sudfeld, Christopher
Vonaesch, Pascale
Wierzba, Thomas F.
Scheele, Suzanne
author_facet Bagamian, Karoun H.
Puett, Chloe
Anderson, John D.
Muhib, Farzana
Pecenka, Clint
Behrman, Jere
Breiman, Robert F.
Edoka, Ijeoma
Horton, Susan
Kang, Gagandeep
Kotloff, Karen L.
Lanata, Claudio F.
Platts-Mills, James A.
Qadri, Firdausi
Rogawski McQuade, Elizabeth T.
Sudfeld, Christopher
Vonaesch, Pascale
Wierzba, Thomas F.
Scheele, Suzanne
author_sort Bagamian, Karoun H.
collection PubMed
description Shigellosis is a leading cause of diarrhea and dysentery in young children from low to middle-income countries and adults experiencing traveler’s diarrhea worldwide. In addition to acute illness, infection by Shigella bacteria is associated with stunted growth among children, which has been linked to detrimental long-term health, developmental, and economic outcomes. On March 24 and 29, 2021, PATH convened an expert panel to discuss the potential impact of Shigella vaccines on these long-term outcomes. Based on current empirical evidence, this discussion focused on whether Shigella vaccines could potentially alleviate the long-term burden associated with Shigella infections. Also, the experts provided recommendations about how to best model the burden, health and vaccine impact, and economic consequences of Shigella infections. This international multidisciplinary panel included 13 scientists, physicians, and economists from multiple relevant specialties. According to the panel, while the relationship between Shigella infections and childhood growth deficits is complex, this relationship likely exists. Vaccine probe studies are the crucial next step to determine whether vaccination could ameliorate Shigella infection-related long-term impacts. Infants should be vaccinated during their first year of life to maximize their protection from severe acute health outcomes and ideally reduce stunting risk and subsequent negative long-term developmental and health impacts. With vaccine schedule crowding, targeted or combination vaccination approaches would likely increase vaccine uptake in high-burden areas. Shigella impact and economic assessment models should include a wider range of linear growth outcomes. Also, these models should produce a spectrum of results—ones addressing immediate benefits for usual health care decision-makers and others that include broader health impacts, providing a more comprehensive picture of vaccination benefits. While many of the underlying mechanisms of this relationship need better characterization, the remaining gaps can be best addressed by collecting data post-vaccine introduction or through large trials.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9551074
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Elsevier
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-95510742022-10-12 Could a Shigella vaccine impact long-term health outcomes?: Summary report of an expert meeting to inform a Shigella vaccine public health value proposition, March 24 and 29, 2021 Bagamian, Karoun H. Puett, Chloe Anderson, John D. Muhib, Farzana Pecenka, Clint Behrman, Jere Breiman, Robert F. Edoka, Ijeoma Horton, Susan Kang, Gagandeep Kotloff, Karen L. Lanata, Claudio F. Platts-Mills, James A. Qadri, Firdausi Rogawski McQuade, Elizabeth T. Sudfeld, Christopher Vonaesch, Pascale Wierzba, Thomas F. Scheele, Suzanne Vaccine X Regular paper Shigellosis is a leading cause of diarrhea and dysentery in young children from low to middle-income countries and adults experiencing traveler’s diarrhea worldwide. In addition to acute illness, infection by Shigella bacteria is associated with stunted growth among children, which has been linked to detrimental long-term health, developmental, and economic outcomes. On March 24 and 29, 2021, PATH convened an expert panel to discuss the potential impact of Shigella vaccines on these long-term outcomes. Based on current empirical evidence, this discussion focused on whether Shigella vaccines could potentially alleviate the long-term burden associated with Shigella infections. Also, the experts provided recommendations about how to best model the burden, health and vaccine impact, and economic consequences of Shigella infections. This international multidisciplinary panel included 13 scientists, physicians, and economists from multiple relevant specialties. According to the panel, while the relationship between Shigella infections and childhood growth deficits is complex, this relationship likely exists. Vaccine probe studies are the crucial next step to determine whether vaccination could ameliorate Shigella infection-related long-term impacts. Infants should be vaccinated during their first year of life to maximize their protection from severe acute health outcomes and ideally reduce stunting risk and subsequent negative long-term developmental and health impacts. With vaccine schedule crowding, targeted or combination vaccination approaches would likely increase vaccine uptake in high-burden areas. Shigella impact and economic assessment models should include a wider range of linear growth outcomes. Also, these models should produce a spectrum of results—ones addressing immediate benefits for usual health care decision-makers and others that include broader health impacts, providing a more comprehensive picture of vaccination benefits. While many of the underlying mechanisms of this relationship need better characterization, the remaining gaps can be best addressed by collecting data post-vaccine introduction or through large trials. Elsevier 2022-09-21 /pmc/articles/PMC9551074/ /pubmed/36237199 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jvacx.2022.100218 Text en © 2022 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Regular paper
Bagamian, Karoun H.
Puett, Chloe
Anderson, John D.
Muhib, Farzana
Pecenka, Clint
Behrman, Jere
Breiman, Robert F.
Edoka, Ijeoma
Horton, Susan
Kang, Gagandeep
Kotloff, Karen L.
Lanata, Claudio F.
Platts-Mills, James A.
Qadri, Firdausi
Rogawski McQuade, Elizabeth T.
Sudfeld, Christopher
Vonaesch, Pascale
Wierzba, Thomas F.
Scheele, Suzanne
Could a Shigella vaccine impact long-term health outcomes?: Summary report of an expert meeting to inform a Shigella vaccine public health value proposition, March 24 and 29, 2021
title Could a Shigella vaccine impact long-term health outcomes?: Summary report of an expert meeting to inform a Shigella vaccine public health value proposition, March 24 and 29, 2021
title_full Could a Shigella vaccine impact long-term health outcomes?: Summary report of an expert meeting to inform a Shigella vaccine public health value proposition, March 24 and 29, 2021
title_fullStr Could a Shigella vaccine impact long-term health outcomes?: Summary report of an expert meeting to inform a Shigella vaccine public health value proposition, March 24 and 29, 2021
title_full_unstemmed Could a Shigella vaccine impact long-term health outcomes?: Summary report of an expert meeting to inform a Shigella vaccine public health value proposition, March 24 and 29, 2021
title_short Could a Shigella vaccine impact long-term health outcomes?: Summary report of an expert meeting to inform a Shigella vaccine public health value proposition, March 24 and 29, 2021
title_sort could a shigella vaccine impact long-term health outcomes?: summary report of an expert meeting to inform a shigella vaccine public health value proposition, march 24 and 29, 2021
topic Regular paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9551074/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36237199
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jvacx.2022.100218
work_keys_str_mv AT bagamiankarounh couldashigellavaccineimpactlongtermhealthoutcomessummaryreportofanexpertmeetingtoinformashigellavaccinepublichealthvaluepropositionmarch24and292021
AT puettchloe couldashigellavaccineimpactlongtermhealthoutcomessummaryreportofanexpertmeetingtoinformashigellavaccinepublichealthvaluepropositionmarch24and292021
AT andersonjohnd couldashigellavaccineimpactlongtermhealthoutcomessummaryreportofanexpertmeetingtoinformashigellavaccinepublichealthvaluepropositionmarch24and292021
AT muhibfarzana couldashigellavaccineimpactlongtermhealthoutcomessummaryreportofanexpertmeetingtoinformashigellavaccinepublichealthvaluepropositionmarch24and292021
AT pecenkaclint couldashigellavaccineimpactlongtermhealthoutcomessummaryreportofanexpertmeetingtoinformashigellavaccinepublichealthvaluepropositionmarch24and292021
AT behrmanjere couldashigellavaccineimpactlongtermhealthoutcomessummaryreportofanexpertmeetingtoinformashigellavaccinepublichealthvaluepropositionmarch24and292021
AT breimanrobertf couldashigellavaccineimpactlongtermhealthoutcomessummaryreportofanexpertmeetingtoinformashigellavaccinepublichealthvaluepropositionmarch24and292021
AT edokaijeoma couldashigellavaccineimpactlongtermhealthoutcomessummaryreportofanexpertmeetingtoinformashigellavaccinepublichealthvaluepropositionmarch24and292021
AT hortonsusan couldashigellavaccineimpactlongtermhealthoutcomessummaryreportofanexpertmeetingtoinformashigellavaccinepublichealthvaluepropositionmarch24and292021
AT kanggagandeep couldashigellavaccineimpactlongtermhealthoutcomessummaryreportofanexpertmeetingtoinformashigellavaccinepublichealthvaluepropositionmarch24and292021
AT kotloffkarenl couldashigellavaccineimpactlongtermhealthoutcomessummaryreportofanexpertmeetingtoinformashigellavaccinepublichealthvaluepropositionmarch24and292021
AT lanataclaudiof couldashigellavaccineimpactlongtermhealthoutcomessummaryreportofanexpertmeetingtoinformashigellavaccinepublichealthvaluepropositionmarch24and292021
AT plattsmillsjamesa couldashigellavaccineimpactlongtermhealthoutcomessummaryreportofanexpertmeetingtoinformashigellavaccinepublichealthvaluepropositionmarch24and292021
AT qadrifirdausi couldashigellavaccineimpactlongtermhealthoutcomessummaryreportofanexpertmeetingtoinformashigellavaccinepublichealthvaluepropositionmarch24and292021
AT rogawskimcquadeelizabetht couldashigellavaccineimpactlongtermhealthoutcomessummaryreportofanexpertmeetingtoinformashigellavaccinepublichealthvaluepropositionmarch24and292021
AT sudfeldchristopher couldashigellavaccineimpactlongtermhealthoutcomessummaryreportofanexpertmeetingtoinformashigellavaccinepublichealthvaluepropositionmarch24and292021
AT vonaeschpascale couldashigellavaccineimpactlongtermhealthoutcomessummaryreportofanexpertmeetingtoinformashigellavaccinepublichealthvaluepropositionmarch24and292021
AT wierzbathomasf couldashigellavaccineimpactlongtermhealthoutcomessummaryreportofanexpertmeetingtoinformashigellavaccinepublichealthvaluepropositionmarch24and292021
AT scheelesuzanne couldashigellavaccineimpactlongtermhealthoutcomessummaryreportofanexpertmeetingtoinformashigellavaccinepublichealthvaluepropositionmarch24and292021