Publications by authors named "Devis Mmbando"

Objective: As part of the Dose Reduction Immunobridging and Safety Study of Two HPV Vaccines in Tanzanian Girls (DoRIS; NCT02834637), the current study is one of the first to evaluate the financial and economic costs of the national rollout of an HPV vaccination program in school-aged girls in sub-Saharan Africa and the potential costs associated with a single dose HPV vaccine program, given recent evidence suggesting that a single dose may be as efficacious as a two-dose regimen.

Methods: The World Health Organization's (WHO) Cervical Cancer Prevention and Control Costing (C4P) micro-costing tool was used to estimate the total financial and economic costs of the national vaccination program from the perspective of the Tanzanian government. Cost data were collected in 2019 via surveys, workshops, and interviews with local stakeholders for vaccines and injection supplies, microplanning, training, sensitization, service delivery, supervision, and cold chain.

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Background: An estimated 15% of girls aged 9-14 years worldwide have been vaccinated against human papillomavirus (HPV) with the recommended two-dose or three-dose schedules. A one-dose HPV vaccine schedule would be simpler and cheaper to deliver. We report immunogenicity and safety results of different doses of two different HPV vaccines in Tanzanian girls.

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Synopsis of recent research by authors named "Devis Mmbando"

  • - Devis Mmbando's research primarily explores the cost-effectiveness and immunogenicity of human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination strategies in Tanzania, focusing on a potential shift from the traditional two- or three-dose regimens to a more simplified one-dose approach.
  • - His first article highlights the financial implications of rolling out a national HPV vaccination program for school-aged girls, utilizing WHO's C4P micro-costing tool to assess various program costs from the government’s perspective.
  • - The second study presents findings from an open-label, randomized trial that compares the immunogenicity and safety of one-dose HPV vaccination to two or three doses, suggesting that a one-dose regimen may offer a feasible alternative in resource-limited settings.