Influence of Population Demography and Immunization History on the Impact of an Antenatal Pertussis Program
Authored by Nicholas Geard, Jodie McVernon, Patricia Therese Campbell, Peter McIntyre
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciw520
Sponsors:
Australian Research Council (ARC)
Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC)
Platforms:
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Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
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 formultiple 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.
Tags
Dynamics
Infection
Prevalence
transmission
Vaccination
Infants
Tetanus
Bordetella-pertussis
Social contacts
Diphtheria