在发病率下降的情况下淋病疫苗接种计划的潜在公共卫生影响:一项模型研究。

IF 9.9 1区 医学 Q1 Medicine
PLoS Medicine Pub Date : 2025-02-07 eCollection Date: 2025-02-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pmed.1004521
Lin Geng, Lilith K Whittles, Borame L Dickens, Martin T W Chio, Yihao Chen, Rayner Kay Jin Tan, Azra Ghani, Jue Tao Lim
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:淋病是2023年新加坡报告的第二大常见性传播疾病。有证据表明,设计用于预防脑膜炎奈瑟菌感染的4CMenB疫苗可能对淋病提供部分交叉保护。这引起了人们对使用4CMenB来减少淋病传播的兴趣。我们在历史上淋病发病率下降的背景下探讨了潜在淋病疫苗接种策略的有效性。方法和发现:我们采用了一个综合传播动态模型,使用贝叶斯方法对当地监测数据进行校准,以了解4CMenB在减少新加坡男男性行为者(MSM)淋病感染和传播方面的潜在公共卫生影响。我们探讨了实施六项疫苗接种计划的成效:(1)向在校所有男性青少年提供疫苗接种(入学前接种疫苗[VbE]),(2)向到性健康诊所进行测试的个人提供疫苗接种(出席时接种疫苗[VoA]),(3)向到性健康诊所就诊并被诊断患有淋病的个人提供疫苗接种(诊断时接种疫苗[VoD]),或(4)根据风险接种疫苗(VaR)。通过向被诊断为淋病的患者以及检测呈阴性但报告每年有5名以上性伴侣的个体提供疫苗接种。我们进一步研究了如果策略仅针对高风险人群(VoA(H),VoD(H)),改变(5)VoA和(6)VoD策略会如何改变。我们通过检查接种疫苗相对于不接种疫苗的影响以及行为参数保持不变来评估有效性。我们进一步确定了不同疫苗接种率(10%、33%、100%)、疫苗效力(22%、31%、47%)和保护持续时间(1.5年、4年、7.5年)对每种疫苗接种策略有效性的影响。对于假设的10年疫苗接种规划,VbE在规划实施期间避免了14.18%的男男性接触者淋病病例。VoA对MSM人群有最高的保护作用,避免了40.26%的病例(95%可信区间(CrI): 18.32%-52.57%),但比任何其他策略需要更多的疫苗剂量。VoD的影响较小(12.04%避免病例(95% CrI: 7.12%-15.00%)),但就每剂量避免病例而言,VoD的效率是VoA的3倍。VoA(H)和VoD(H)分别提高了VoA和VoD策略的效率,使每剂量的避免病例分别增加到0.22和0.24,但其保护效果与VoA(H)和VoD(H)相似(VoA(H): 40.10%避免病例(95% CrI: 18.14% ~ 52.55%))和VoD(VoD(H): 12.04%避免病例(95% CrI: 7.12% ~ 15.00%))。VaR(40.10%避免病例(95% CrI: 18.14%-52.55%))几乎与VoA具有相同的影响,但由于需要的剂量比VoA少,因此更有效,每剂量为0.21例(95% CrI: 0.12-0.27)避免病例。敏感性分析表明,VaR对公共卫生的影响最大,在任何效力或保护时间(或两者都有)的疫苗中,每剂量避免的病例数最多,尽管VoD和VoD(H)节省了更多的疫苗资源,并且在长保护期的高保护性疫苗中,每剂量避免的MSM病例数最多。结论:根据新加坡性健康诊所的风险,MSM接种淋病疫苗可以减少淋病的获得和传播。开发以保护效力为重点的淋病特异性疫苗和实施有效的疫苗接种规划可最大限度地提高公共卫生影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Potential public health impacts of gonorrhea vaccination programmes under declining incidences: A modeling study.

Background: Gonorrhea is the second most common sexually transmitted disease notified in Singapore in 2023. Evidence suggests that the 4CMenB vaccine designed to protect against Neisseria meningitidis infection may offer partial cross-protection against gonorrhea. This generated interest in using 4CMenB for the purpose of staving gonorrhea transmission. We explored the efficacy of potential gonorrhea vaccination strategies in the context of historically declining gonorrhea incidence.

Methods and findings: We employed an integrated transmission-dynamic model, calibrated using Bayesian methods to local surveillance data to understand the potential public health impact of 4CMenB in reducing gonorrhea acquisition and transmission in men who have sex with men (MSM) in Singapore. We explored the efficacy of implementing six vaccination programmes: (1) offering vaccination to all male adolescents in schools (vaccination before entry [VbE]), (2) offering vaccination to individuals attending sexual health clinics for testing (vaccination on attendance [VoA]), (3) offering vaccination to individuals attending sexual health clinics and who were diagnosed with gonorrhea (vaccination on diagnosis [VoD]), or (4) vaccination according to risk (VaR), by offering vaccination to patients who were diagnosed with gonorrhea plus individuals who tested negative, but report having more than five sexual partners per year. We further examined how altering (5) VoA and (6) VoD strategies changed if the strategies only targeted high risk groups (VoA(H),VoD(H)). We assessed efficacy by examining vaccination impact relative to no vaccination and when behavioral parameters were held constant. We further ascertained the effects of varying vaccine uptake (10%, 33%, 100%), vaccine efficacy (22%, 31%, 47%), and duration of protection (1.5, 4, 7.5 years) on the effectiveness of each vaccination strategy. For a hypothetical 10-year vaccination programme, VbE had 14.18% of MSM gonorrhea cases averted over the time the programme was implemented. VoA had the highest protective impact on the MSM population with 40.26% averted cases (95% credible interval (CrI): 18.32%-52.57%), but required more vaccine doses than any other strategy. VoD had a smaller impact (12.04% averted cases (95% CrI: 7.12%-15.00%)), but was three times more efficient than VoA in terms of averted cases per dose. VoA(H) and VoD(H) improved the efficiency of VoA and VoD strategies by increasing averted cases per dose to 0.22 and 0.24 respectively, but conferred similar protective effects as VoA (VoA(H): 40.10% averted cases (95% CrI: 18.14%-52.55%)) and VoD (VoD(H): 12.04% averted cases (95% CrI: 7.12%-15.00%)), respectively. VaR (40.10% averted cases (95% CrI: 18.14%-52.55%)) had almost the same impact as VoA, but was more efficient by requiring administration of fewer doses than VoA, with 0.21 (95% CrI: 0.12-0.27) averted cases per dose. Sensitivity analyses indicated that VaR had the greatest public health impact with the highest number of averted cases per dose for vaccines of any efficacy or duration of protection (or both), although VoD and VoD(H) saved more vaccine resource and had the highest number averted MSM cases per dose for highly protective vaccines of long protection.

Conclusions: Vaccination of MSM against gonorrhea, according to risk in sexual health clinics in Singapore, can be considered to reduce gonorrhea acquisition and transmission. Development of gonorrhea-specific vaccines which focuses on protective efficacy and the implementation of efficient vaccination programmes can maximize public health impact.

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来源期刊
PLoS Medicine
PLoS Medicine MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL-
CiteScore
17.60
自引率
0.60%
发文量
227
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: PLOS Medicine is a prominent platform for discussing and researching global health challenges. The journal covers a wide range of topics, including biomedical, environmental, social, and political factors affecting health. It prioritizes articles that contribute to clinical practice, health policy, or a better understanding of pathophysiology, ultimately aiming to improve health outcomes across different settings. The journal is unwavering in its commitment to uphold the highest ethical standards in medical publishing. This includes actively managing and disclosing any conflicts of interest related to reporting, reviewing, and publishing. PLOS Medicine promotes transparency in the entire review and publication process. The journal also encourages data sharing and encourages the reuse of published work. Additionally, authors retain copyright for their work, and the publication is made accessible through Open Access with no restrictions on availability and dissemination. PLOS Medicine takes measures to avoid conflicts of interest associated with advertising drugs and medical devices or engaging in the exclusive sale of reprints.
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