Abstract

BackgroundRespiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infects almost all children by the age of 2 years, with the risk of hospitalisation highest in the first 6 months of life. Development and licensure of a vaccine to prevent severe RSV illness in infants is a public health priority. A recent phase 3 clinical trial estimated the efficacy of maternal vaccination at 39% over the first 90 days of life. Households play a key role in RSV transmission; however, few estimates of population-level RSV vaccine impact account for household structure.MethodsWe simulated RSV transmission within a stochastic, individual-based model framework, using an existing demographic model, structured by age and household and parameterised with Australian data, as an exemplar of a high-income country. We modelled vaccination by immunising pregnant women and explicitly linked the immune status of each mother-infant pair. We quantified the impact on children for a range of vaccine properties and uptake levels.ResultsWe found that a maternal immunisation strategy would have the most substantial impact in infants younger than 3 months, reducing RSV infection incidence in this age group by 16.6% at 70% vaccination coverage. In children aged 3–6 months, RSV infection was reduced by 5.3%. Over the first 6 months of life, the incidence rate for infants born to unvaccinated mothers was 1.26 times that of infants born to vaccinated mothers. The impact in older age groups was more modest, with evidence of infections being delayed to the second year of life.ConclusionsOur findings show that while individual benefit from maternal RSV vaccination could be substantial, population-level reductions may be more modest. Vaccination impact was sensitive to the extent that vaccination prevented infection, highlighting the need for more vaccine trial data.

Highlights

  • Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infects almost all children by the age of 2 years, with the risk of hospitalisation highest in the first 6 months of life

  • Effect of maternal vaccination Infant immunity at birth—percent immune and median duration According to the model, without maternal vaccination in place, 34% (interquartile range (IQR) 34–34) of infants would be born with some immunity to RSV, resulting in all baseline simulations producing a median duration of immunity of 0 days

  • Percent change in annual incidence Under the best-case scenario of 100% vaccination coverage, the greatest benefit of vaccination was observed in infants younger than 3 months, with population incidence of infection reduced by 25.5% (IQR 20.9–28.7) (Fig. 3a)

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Summary

Introduction

Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infects almost all children by the age of 2 years, with the risk of hospitalisation highest in the first 6 months of life. Development and licensure of a vaccine to prevent severe RSV illness in infants is a public health priority. A recent phase 3 clinical trial estimated the efficacy of maternal vaccination at 39% over the first 90 days of life. Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) causes respiratory illness in young children and presents a substantial global public health burden, with almost all children being infected before the age of 2 years. Maternal immunisation aims to elicit high levels of protective RSV-specific antibody in pregnant women, conferring immunity via transplacental transfer of antibodies to the unborn infant, and fostering protection from RSV disease in the first few months of life, when the risk of hospitalisation from severe RSV disease is highest [6,7,8]. While the primary efficacy endpoint of efficacy against medically significant RSV lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI) through 90 days was not met (39.4%, 95% CI 5.3–61.2%), efficacy was demonstrated in preventing RSV LRTI hospitalisation through 90 days (44.4%, 95% CI 19.6–61.5%) and all-cause respiratory illness-related hospitalisation through 180 days (25.3%, 95% CI 5.3–41.0%) [9, 10]

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