AI Article Synopsis

  • Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) poses a significant health risk, especially for infants, leading to high medical costs and hospitalizations in the US.
  • A study using a decision-analytic model found that nirsevimab, a long-acting monoclonal antibody, could effectively reduce RSV-related illnesses and medical expenses among infants during their first RSV season.
  • Universal vaccination with nirsevimab may prevent over 290,000 cases of RSV-MALRTI and nearly 25,000 hospitalizations, saving approximately $612 million annually in healthcare costs.

Article Abstract

Background: Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is associated with substantial morbidity in the United States, especially among infants. Nirsevimab, an investigational long-acting monoclonal antibody, was evaluated as an immunoprophylactic strategy for infants in their first RSV season and for its potential impact on RSV-associated, medically attended lower respiratory tract illness (RSV-MALRTI) and associated costs.

Methods: A static decision-analytic model of the US birth cohort during its first RSV season was developed to estimate nirsevimab's impact on RSV-related health events and costs; model inputs included US-specific costs and epidemiological data. Modelled RSV-related outcomes included primary care and emergency room visits, hospitalizations including intensive care unit admission and mechanical ventilations, and RSV-related mortality.

Results: Under current standard of care, RSV caused 529 915 RSV-MALRTIs and 47 281 hospitalizations annually, representing $1.2 billion (2021 US dollars [USD]) in costs. Universal immunization of all infants with nirsevimab is expected to reduce 290 174 RSV-MALRTI, 24 986 hospitalizations, and expenditures of $612 million 2021 USD.

Conclusions: An all-infant immunization strategy with nirsevimab could substantially reduce the health and economic burden for US infants during their first RSV season. While this reduction is driven by term infants, all infants, including palivizumab-eligible and preterm infants, would benefit from this strategy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9377043PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jiac216DOI Listing

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