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Modeling the impact of child vaccination (5–11 y) on overall COVID-19 related hospitalizations and mortality in a context of omicron variant predominance and different vaccination coverage paces in Brazil

BACKGROUND: Developing countries have experienced significant COVID-19 disease burden. With the emergence of new variants, particularly omicron, the disease burden in children has increased. When the first COVID-19 vaccine was approved for use in children aged 5–11 years of age, very few countries r...

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Autores principales: Müller, Gabriel Cardozo, Ferreira, Leonardo Souto, Mesias Campos, Felipe Ernesto, Borges, Marcelo Eduardo, Berg de Almeida, Gabriel, Poloni, Silas, Simon, Lorena Mendes, Bagattini, Ângela Maria, Quarti, Michelle, Felizola Diniz Filho, José Alexandre, Kraenkel, Roberto André, Coutinho, Renato Mendes, Camey, Suzi Alves, Kuchenbecker, Ricardo de Souza, Toscano, Cristiana Maria
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9678377/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36437904
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.lana.2022.100396
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author Müller, Gabriel Cardozo
Ferreira, Leonardo Souto
Mesias Campos, Felipe Ernesto
Borges, Marcelo Eduardo
Berg de Almeida, Gabriel
Poloni, Silas
Simon, Lorena Mendes
Bagattini, Ângela Maria
Quarti, Michelle
Felizola Diniz Filho, José Alexandre
Kraenkel, Roberto André
Coutinho, Renato Mendes
Camey, Suzi Alves
Kuchenbecker, Ricardo de Souza
Toscano, Cristiana Maria
author_facet Müller, Gabriel Cardozo
Ferreira, Leonardo Souto
Mesias Campos, Felipe Ernesto
Borges, Marcelo Eduardo
Berg de Almeida, Gabriel
Poloni, Silas
Simon, Lorena Mendes
Bagattini, Ângela Maria
Quarti, Michelle
Felizola Diniz Filho, José Alexandre
Kraenkel, Roberto André
Coutinho, Renato Mendes
Camey, Suzi Alves
Kuchenbecker, Ricardo de Souza
Toscano, Cristiana Maria
author_sort Müller, Gabriel Cardozo
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Developing countries have experienced significant COVID-19 disease burden. With the emergence of new variants, particularly omicron, the disease burden in children has increased. When the first COVID-19 vaccine was approved for use in children aged 5–11 years of age, very few countries recommended vaccination due to limited risk-benefit evidence for vaccination of this population. In Brazil, ranking second in the global COVID-19 death toll, the childhood COVID-19 disease burden increased significantly in early 2022. This prompted a risk-benefit assessment of the introduction and scaling-up of COVID-19 vaccination of children. METHODS: To estimate the potential impact of vaccinating children aged 5–11 years with mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccine in the context of omicron dominance, we developed a discrete-time SEIR-like model stratified in age groups, considering a three-month time horizon. We considered three scenarios: No vaccination, slow, and maximum vaccination paces. In each scenario, we estimated the potential reduction in total COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, deaths, hospitalization costs, and potential years of life lost, considering the absence of vaccination as the base-case scenario. FINDINGS: We estimated that vaccinating at a maximum pace could prevent, between mid-January and April 2022, about 26,000 COVID-19 hospitalizations, and 4200 deaths in all age groups; of which 5400 hospitalizations and 410 deaths in children aged 5–11 years. Continuing vaccination at a slow/current pace would prevent 1450 deaths and 9700 COVID-19 hospitalizations in all age groups in this same time period; of which 180 deaths and 2390 hospitalizations in children only. INTERPRETATION: Maximum vaccination of children results in a significant reduction of COVID-19 hospitalizations and deaths and should be enforced in developing countries with significant disease incidence in children. FUNDING: This manuscript was funded by the Brazilian Council for Scientific and Technology Development (10.13039/501100003593CNPq – Process # 402834/2020-8).
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spelling pubmed-96783772022-11-22 Modeling the impact of child vaccination (5–11 y) on overall COVID-19 related hospitalizations and mortality in a context of omicron variant predominance and different vaccination coverage paces in Brazil Müller, Gabriel Cardozo Ferreira, Leonardo Souto Mesias Campos, Felipe Ernesto Borges, Marcelo Eduardo Berg de Almeida, Gabriel Poloni, Silas Simon, Lorena Mendes Bagattini, Ângela Maria Quarti, Michelle Felizola Diniz Filho, José Alexandre Kraenkel, Roberto André Coutinho, Renato Mendes Camey, Suzi Alves Kuchenbecker, Ricardo de Souza Toscano, Cristiana Maria Lancet Reg Health Am Articles BACKGROUND: Developing countries have experienced significant COVID-19 disease burden. With the emergence of new variants, particularly omicron, the disease burden in children has increased. When the first COVID-19 vaccine was approved for use in children aged 5–11 years of age, very few countries recommended vaccination due to limited risk-benefit evidence for vaccination of this population. In Brazil, ranking second in the global COVID-19 death toll, the childhood COVID-19 disease burden increased significantly in early 2022. This prompted a risk-benefit assessment of the introduction and scaling-up of COVID-19 vaccination of children. METHODS: To estimate the potential impact of vaccinating children aged 5–11 years with mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccine in the context of omicron dominance, we developed a discrete-time SEIR-like model stratified in age groups, considering a three-month time horizon. We considered three scenarios: No vaccination, slow, and maximum vaccination paces. In each scenario, we estimated the potential reduction in total COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, deaths, hospitalization costs, and potential years of life lost, considering the absence of vaccination as the base-case scenario. FINDINGS: We estimated that vaccinating at a maximum pace could prevent, between mid-January and April 2022, about 26,000 COVID-19 hospitalizations, and 4200 deaths in all age groups; of which 5400 hospitalizations and 410 deaths in children aged 5–11 years. Continuing vaccination at a slow/current pace would prevent 1450 deaths and 9700 COVID-19 hospitalizations in all age groups in this same time period; of which 180 deaths and 2390 hospitalizations in children only. INTERPRETATION: Maximum vaccination of children results in a significant reduction of COVID-19 hospitalizations and deaths and should be enforced in developing countries with significant disease incidence in children. FUNDING: This manuscript was funded by the Brazilian Council for Scientific and Technology Development (10.13039/501100003593CNPq – Process # 402834/2020-8). Elsevier 2022-11-17 /pmc/articles/PMC9678377/ /pubmed/36437904 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.lana.2022.100396 Text en © 2022 The Author(s) 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 Articles
Müller, Gabriel Cardozo
Ferreira, Leonardo Souto
Mesias Campos, Felipe Ernesto
Borges, Marcelo Eduardo
Berg de Almeida, Gabriel
Poloni, Silas
Simon, Lorena Mendes
Bagattini, Ângela Maria
Quarti, Michelle
Felizola Diniz Filho, José Alexandre
Kraenkel, Roberto André
Coutinho, Renato Mendes
Camey, Suzi Alves
Kuchenbecker, Ricardo de Souza
Toscano, Cristiana Maria
Modeling the impact of child vaccination (5–11 y) on overall COVID-19 related hospitalizations and mortality in a context of omicron variant predominance and different vaccination coverage paces in Brazil
title Modeling the impact of child vaccination (5–11 y) on overall COVID-19 related hospitalizations and mortality in a context of omicron variant predominance and different vaccination coverage paces in Brazil
title_full Modeling the impact of child vaccination (5–11 y) on overall COVID-19 related hospitalizations and mortality in a context of omicron variant predominance and different vaccination coverage paces in Brazil
title_fullStr Modeling the impact of child vaccination (5–11 y) on overall COVID-19 related hospitalizations and mortality in a context of omicron variant predominance and different vaccination coverage paces in Brazil
title_full_unstemmed Modeling the impact of child vaccination (5–11 y) on overall COVID-19 related hospitalizations and mortality in a context of omicron variant predominance and different vaccination coverage paces in Brazil
title_short Modeling the impact of child vaccination (5–11 y) on overall COVID-19 related hospitalizations and mortality in a context of omicron variant predominance and different vaccination coverage paces in Brazil
title_sort modeling the impact of child vaccination (5–11 y) on overall covid-19 related hospitalizations and mortality in a context of omicron variant predominance and different vaccination coverage paces in brazil
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9678377/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36437904
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.lana.2022.100396
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