Abstract

Background. Antenatal pertussis vaccination is being considered as a means to reduce the burden of infant pertussis in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), but its likely impact in such settings is yet to be quantified.Methods. An individual-based model was used to simulate the demographic structure and dynamics of a population with characteristics similar to those of LMICs. Transmission of pertussis within this population was simulated to capture the incidence of infection in (1) the absence of vaccination; (2) with a primary course only (three doses of diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis vaccines [DTP3] commencing in 1985, 1995, or 2005 at 20%, 50%, or 80% coverage); and (3) with the addition of an antenatal pertussis program.Results. Modeled annual incidence averaged over the period 2015–2024 reduced with increasing DTP3 coverage, regardless of the year childhood vaccination commenced. Over the same period, the proportion of infants born with passive protection did not change substantially compared with the prevaccination situation, regardless of DTP3 coverage and start year. We found minimal impact of antenatal vaccination on infection in all infants when mothers were eligible for a single antenatal dose. When mothers were eligible for multiple antenatal doses, incidence in infants aged 0–2 months was reduced by around 30%. This result did not hold for the full 0- to 1-year age group, for whom antenatal vaccination did not reduce infection levels.Conclusions. While antenatal vaccination could potentially reduce infant mortality in LMICs, broader gains at the population level are likely to be achieved by focusing efforts on increasing DTP3 coverage.

Highlights

  • Antenatal pertussis vaccination is being considered as a means to reduce the burden of infant pertussis in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), but its likely impact in such settings is yet to be quantified

  • Clinical cases of pertussis are grossly underreported in LMICs, due to less developed surveillance systems, reduced access to healthcare services, and limited diagnostic testing [2]

  • While worldwide pertussis vaccination coverage has substantially improved since the inception of the Expanded Programme on Immunization (EPI) [3], later adoption of vaccination in LMICs, with variable coverage due to supply and delivery issues and political instability, is likely to have led to heterogeneity in disease burden [4]

Read more

Summary

Methods

We model the demographic structure and dynamics of a population using a previously developed individual-based model that characterizes individuals by their age, sex, and the household to which they belong [11, 12]. Recent studies undertaken in Zambia and South Africa [15], Vietnam [16], and Kenya [17], while differing in their methodologies and the reported number of contacts, showed that key patterns of age-assortative and intergenerational mixing remain similar across different settings. Our model simulates patterns of contact behavior that reflect the age and household structure of the population and the observed tendency for contact to occur among individuals of similar ages

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call