1. Impact on meningococcal disease of different vaccination strategies with 4CMenB and MenACWY-CRM197 in infants and adolescents in Argentina.
- Author
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Gómez JA, Pannunzio ME, Karwala P, Nocita F, Urueña A, Giglio N, and Graña MG
- Subjects
- Humans, Argentina epidemiology, Adolescent, Infant, Child, Preschool, Child, Serogroup, Immunization Schedule, Male, Vaccines, Conjugate administration & dosage, Vaccines, Conjugate immunology, Female, Neisseria meningitidis immunology, Meningococcal Vaccines administration & dosage, Meningococcal Vaccines immunology, Meningococcal Infections prevention & control, Meningococcal Infections epidemiology, Immunization Programs, Vaccination methods
- Abstract
Background: Invasive meningococcal disease (IMD) is a life-threatening disease, primarily affecting infants and children. Argentina introduced routine meningococcal vaccination in infants and adolescents in 2017, with MenACWY vaccination targeting serogroups A, C, W, and Y (current National Immunization Program [cNIP]). Serogroup B, more prevalent since 2015, became predominant in children. The dynamic trends of IMD epidemiology and availability of a four-component meningococcal B vaccine (4CMenB) call for a reassessment of the best schedule to optimize IMD prevention. The objective was to model the public health impact of routine 4CMenB and/or MenACWY in infants and adolescents, using different vaccination strategies compared with the cNIP in Argentina., Methods: A published dynamic transmission model adapted for Argentina evaluated six vaccination strategies versus the cNIP: infant 4CMenB alone (1), infant 4CMenB with adolescent MenACWY (2), adolescent MenACWY alone (3), infant 4CMenB & MenACWY (4), infant MenACWY alone (5), and infant 4CMenB & MenACWY with adolescent MenACWY (6)., Results: Strategies including adolescent MenACWY with infant 4CMenB (or 4CMenB plus MenACWY) vaccination had the largest impact on increasing IMD prevention i.e., up to 23 % higher than the cNIP after 25 years. Strategies including 4CMenB (1, 2, 4, 6) had the largest reduction of serogroup B IMD (impact is seen among children 0-4 years old) i.e., a 39 % decrease within the first five years of introducing 4CMenB. Strategies including adolescent MenACWY (cNIP, 2, 3 and 6) had the largest reduction of serogroup ACWY IMD, with near elimination after 30 years (impact seen in all ages, due to herd protection)., Conclusions: Adding routine infant 4CMenB (either to the complete cNIP or instead of infant MenACWY) could further reduce IMD cases, sequelae, and deaths in Argentina. In addition, maintaining the adolescent MenACWY program, with its herd immunity benefits, could achieve near elimination of serogroup ACWY IMD over 30 years., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest María Gabriela Graña, Jorge A. Gómez, Florencia Nocita and Maria Pannunzio are employed by GSK. Maria Gabriela Graña and Jorge A. Gomez declare holding shares in GSK. Analía Urueña declares her institution received funding for investigator led studies from GSK, MSD, Seqirus, Takeda and Sanofi-Pasteur and she also declares receiving consulting fees from GSK for the study. Analia Urueña also received honoraria from Seqirus and Takeda, for acting as a speaker in congresses outside the scope of the submitted work, and declares receiving support from Seqirus and Takeda for attending meetings, as well as honoraria from GSK, Seqirus, Valneva, Sanofi and Takeda, for participating in advisory boards. Analia Urueña is a board member of the Argentinian Vaccinology and Epidemiology Society Piotr Karwala, is an employee of Putnam (previous name: Creativ-Ceutical), and declares that this company was contracted by GSK to provide support with the current study. Norberto Giglio declares having received an unrestricted grant from Sanofi Pasteur to develop a study for the prevention of meningococcal diseases, he also declares collaborating as an advisor for this company and receiving honorarium for a cost effectiveness study in Chile. He also received honoraria from GSK for his participation in the current manuscript. Norberto Giglio also declares having received support from GSK for presenting a poster at IDWeek 2022. He also declares participating in a COVID-19 vaccines safety monitoring board under the Global Vaccine data network supported by CDC, and receiving DNA samples for the genomics vaccines safety study conducted as part of his role in this board. Norberto Giglio is also the head of the IRB Hospital de Niños Ricardo Gutierrez Buenos Aires Argentina and head of the Argentina Pediatrics Society Research Board. All authors declare no other financial and non-financial relationships and activities., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2025
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