학술논문

Mass campaigns combining antimalarial drugs and anti-infective vaccines as seasonal interventions for malaria control, elimination and prevention of resurgence: a modelling study
Document Type
Report
Source
BMC Infectious Diseases. October 29, 2019
Subject
Control
Prevention
Usage
Risk factors
Malaria vaccines -- Usage
Malaria -- Risk factors -- Prevention -- Control
Vaccines
Artemisinin
Clinical trials
Antimalarials
Epidemiology
Public health
Morbidity
Disease eradication
Combination drug therapy
Cancer prevention
Public health movements
Language
English
ISSN
1471-2334
Abstract
Author(s): Flavia Camponovo[sup.1,2] , Chris F. Ockenhouse[sup.3] , Cynthia Lee[sup.3] and Melissa A. Penny[sup.1,2] Background In 2015 WHO set new goals of reducing malaria incidence by 90% and eliminating malaria [...]
Background The only licensed malaria vaccine, RTS,S/AS01, has been developed for morbidity-control in young children. The potential impact on transmission of deploying such anti-infective vaccines to wider age ranges, possibly with co-administration of antimalarial treatment, is unknown. Combinations of existing malaria interventions is becoming increasingly important as evidence mounts that progress on reducing malaria incidence is stalling and threatened by resistance. Methods Malaria transmission and intervention dynamics were simulated using OpenMalaria, an individual-based simulation model of malaria transmission, by considering a seasonal transmission setting and by varying epidemiological and setting parameters such as transmission intensity, case management, intervention types and intervention coverages. Chemopreventive drugs and anti-infective vaccine efficacy profiles were based on previous studies in which model parameters were fitted to clinical trial data. These intervention properties were used to evaluate the potential of seasonal mass applications of preventative anti-infective malaria vaccines, alone or in combination with chemoprevention, to reduce malaria transmission, prevent resurgence, and/or reach transmission interruption. Results Deploying a vaccine to all ages on its own is a less effective intervention strategy compared to chemoprevention alone. However, vaccines combined with drugs are likely to achieve dramatic prevalence reductions and in few settings, transmission interruption. The combined mass intervention will result in lower prevalence following the intervention compared to chemoprevention alone and will increase chances of interruption of transmission resulting from a synergistic effect between both interventions. The combination of vaccine and drug increases the time before transmission resurges after mass interventions cease compared to mass treatment alone. Deploying vaccines and drugs together requires fewer rounds of mass intervention and fewer years of intervention to achieve the same public health impact as chemoprevention alone. Conclusions Through simulations we identified a previously unidentified value of deploying vaccines with drugs, namely the greatest benefit will be in preventing and delaying transmission resurgence for longer periods than with other human targeted interventions. This is suggesting a potential role for deploying vaccines alongside drugs in transmission foci as part of surveillance-response strategies. Keywords: Vaccine, Mass intervention, Resurgence, Seasonal transmission, Malaria, Simulation