Modelling the relative benefits of using the measles vaccine outside cold chain for outbreak response.

Vaccine

DSI-NRF Centre of Excellence in Epidemiological Modelling and Analysis, Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch, South Africa.

Published: September 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Rapid outbreak response vaccination is crucial for measles control, but storing vaccines at the right temperature can be difficult in remote areas. Licensure for vaccines to be delivered outside of the cold chain could help streamline storage and transport, requiring careful consideration of operational changes.
  • A modeling framework was created to analyze different vaccine delivery strategies (OCC, PCC, FCC) by assessing factors like campaign duration, vaccination coverage, and cases averted using various supply chain elements.
  • Results show that the OCC strategy offers quicker campaign durations and the highest case-averting potential, with most strategies achieving around 80% vaccination coverage.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Rapid outbreak response vaccination is a strategy for measles control and elimination. Measles vaccines must be stored and transported within a specified temperature range, but this can present significant challenges when targeting remote populations. Measles vaccine licensure for delivery outside cold chain (OCC) could provide more vaccine transport/storage space without ice packs, and a solution to shorten response times. However, due to vaccine safety and wastage considerations, the OCC strategy will require other operational changes, potentially including the use of 1-dose (monodose) instead of 10-dose vials, requiring larger transport/storage equipment currently achieved with 10-dose vials. These trade-offs require quantitative comparisons of vaccine delivery options to evaluate their relative benefits.

Methods: We developed a modelling framework combining elements of the vaccine supply chain - cold chain, vial, team, and transport equipment types - with a measles transmission dynamics model to compare vaccine delivery options. We compared 10 strategies resulting from combinations of the vaccine supply elements and grouped into three main classes: OCC, partial cold chain (PCC), and full cold chain (FCC). For each strategy, we explored a campaign with 20 teams sequentially targeting 5 locations with 100,000 individuals each. We characterised the time needed to freeze ice packs and complete the campaign (campaign duration), vaccination coverage, and cases averted, assuming a fixed pre-deployment delay before campaign commencement. We performed sensitivity analyses of the pre-deployment delay, population sizes, and two team allocation schemes.

Results: The OCC, PCC, and FCC strategies achieve campaign durations of 50, 51, and 52 days, respectively. Nine of the ten strategies can achieve a vaccination coverage of 80%, and OCC averts the most cases.

Discussion: The OCC strategy, therefore, presents improved operational and epidemiological outcomes relative to current practice and the other options considered.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2021.08.053DOI Listing

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