The potential effect of improved provision of rabies post-exposure prophylaxis in Gavi-eligible countries: a modelling study
Tens of thousands of people die from dog-mediated rabies annually. Deaths can be prevented through post-exposure prophylaxis for people who have been bitten, and the disease eliminated through dog vaccination. Current post-exposure prophylaxis use saves many lives, but availability remains poor in m...
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| Published in: | The Lancet infectious diseases Vol. 19; no. 1; pp. 102 - 111 |
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| Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
| Format: | Journal Article |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
United States
Elsevier Ltd
01.01.2019
Elsevier Limited New York, NY : Elsevier Science ; The Lancet Pub. Group, 2001 Elsevier Science ;, The Lancet Pub. Group |
| Subjects: | |
| ISSN: | 1473-3099, 1474-4457, 1474-4457 |
| Online Access: | Get full text |
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| Abstract | Tens of thousands of people die from dog-mediated rabies annually. Deaths can be prevented through post-exposure prophylaxis for people who have been bitten, and the disease eliminated through dog vaccination. Current post-exposure prophylaxis use saves many lives, but availability remains poor in many rabies-endemic countries due to high costs, poor access, and supply.
We developed epidemiological and economic models to investigate the effect of an investment in post-exposure prophylaxis by Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance. We modelled post-exposure prophylaxis use according to the status quo, with improved access using WHO-recommended intradermal vaccination, with and without rabies immunoglobulin, and with and without dog vaccination. We took the health provider perspective, including only direct costs.
We predict more than 1 million deaths will occur in the 67 rabies-endemic countries considered from 2020 to 2035, under the status quo. Current post-exposure prophylaxis use prevents approximately 56 000 deaths annually. Expanded access to, and free provision of, post-exposure prophylaxis would prevent an additional 489 000 deaths between 2020 and 2035. Under this switch to efficient intradermal post-exposure prophylaxis regimens, total projected vaccine needs remain similar (about 73 million vials) yet 17·4 million more people are vaccinated, making this an extremely cost-effective method, with costs of US$635 per death averted and $33 per disability-adjusted life-years averted. Scaling up dog vaccination programmes could eliminate dog-mediated rabies over this time period; improved post-exposure prophylaxis access remains cost-effective under this scenario, especially in combination with patient risk assessments to reduce unnecessary post-exposure prophylaxis use.
Investing in post-exposure vaccines would be an extremely cost-effective intervention that could substantially reduce disease burden and catalyse dog vaccination efforts to eliminate dog-mediated rabies.
World Health Organization. |
|---|---|
| AbstractList | Summary Background Tens of thousands of people die from dog-mediated rabies annually. Deaths can be prevented through post-exposure prophylaxis for people who have been bitten, and the disease eliminated through dog vaccination. Current post-exposure prophylaxis use saves many lives, but availability remains poor in many rabies-endemic countries due to high costs, poor access, and supply. Methods We developed epidemiological and economic models to investigate the effect of an investment in post-exposure prophylaxis by Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance. We modelled post-exposure prophylaxis use according to the status quo, with improved access using WHO-recommended intradermal vaccination, with and without rabies immunoglobulin, and with and without dog vaccination. We took the health provider perspective, including only direct costs. Findings We predict more than 1 million deaths will occur in the 67 rabies-endemic countries considered from 2020 to 2035, under the status quo. Current post-exposure prophylaxis use prevents approximately 56 000 deaths annually. Expanded access to, and free provision of, post-exposure prophylaxis would prevent an additional 489 000 deaths between 2020 and 2035. Under this switch to efficient intradermal post-exposure prophylaxis regimens, total projected vaccine needs remain similar (about 73 million vials) yet 17·4 million more people are vaccinated, making this an extremely cost-effective method, with costs of US$635 per death averted and $33 per disability-adjusted life-years averted. Scaling up dog vaccination programmes could eliminate dog-mediated rabies over this time period; improved post-exposure prophylaxis access remains cost-effective under this scenario, especially in combination with patient risk assessments to reduce unnecessary post-exposure prophylaxis use. Interpretation Investing in post-exposure vaccines would be an extremely cost-effective intervention that could substantially reduce disease burden and catalyse dog vaccination efforts to eliminate dog-mediated rabies. Funding World Health Organization. Background: Tens of thousands of people die from dog-mediated rabies annually. Deaths can be prevented through post-exposure prophylaxis for people who have been bitten, and the disease eliminated through dog vaccination. Current post-exposure prophylaxis use saves many lives, but availability remains poor in many rabies-endemic countries due to high costs, poor access, and supply.Methods: We developed epidemiological and economic models to investigate the effect of an investment in post-exposure prophylaxis by Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance. We modelled post-exposure prophylaxis use according to the status quo, with improved access using WHO-recommended intradermal vaccination, with and without rabies immunoglobulin, and with and without dog vaccination. We took the health provider perspective, including only direct costs.Findings: We predict more than 1 million deaths will occur in the 67 rabies-endemic countries considered from 2020 to 2035, under the status quo. Current post-exposure prophylaxis use prevents approximately 56 000 deaths annually. Expanded access to, and free provision of, post-exposure prophylaxis would prevent an additional 489 000 deaths between 2020 and 2035. Under this switch to efficient intradermal post-exposure prophylaxis regimens, total projected vaccine needs remain similar (about 73 million vials) yet 17·4 million more people are vaccinated, making this an extremely cost-effective method, with costs of US$635 per death averted and $33 per disability-adjusted life-years averted. Scaling up dog vaccination programmes could eliminate dog-mediated rabies over this time period; improved post-exposure prophylaxis access remains cost-effective under this scenario, especially in combination with patient risk assessments to reduce unnecessary post-exposure prophylaxis use.Interpretation: Investing in post-exposure vaccines would be an extremely cost-effective intervention that could substantially reduce disease burden and catalyse dog vaccination efforts to eliminate dog-mediated rabies.Funding: World Health Organization. Tens of thousands of people die from dog-mediated rabies annually. Deaths can be prevented through post-exposure prophylaxis for people who have been bitten, and the disease eliminated through dog vaccination. Current post-exposure prophylaxis use saves many lives, but availability remains poor in many rabies-endemic countries due to high costs, poor access, and supply. We developed epidemiological and economic models to investigate the effect of an investment in post-exposure prophylaxis by Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance. We modelled post-exposure prophylaxis use according to the status quo, with improved access using WHO-recommended intradermal vaccination, with and without rabies immunoglobulin, and with and without dog vaccination. We took the health provider perspective, including only direct costs. We predict more than 1 million deaths will occur in the 67 rabies-endemic countries considered from 2020 to 2035, under the status quo. Current post-exposure prophylaxis use prevents approximately 56 000 deaths annually. Expanded access to, and free provision of, post-exposure prophylaxis would prevent an additional 489 000 deaths between 2020 and 2035. Under this switch to efficient intradermal post-exposure prophylaxis regimens, total projected vaccine needs remain similar (about 73 million vials) yet 17·4 million more people are vaccinated, making this an extremely cost-effective method, with costs of US$635 per death averted and $33 per disability-adjusted life-years averted. Scaling up dog vaccination programmes could eliminate dog-mediated rabies over this time period; improved post-exposure prophylaxis access remains cost-effective under this scenario, especially in combination with patient risk assessments to reduce unnecessary post-exposure prophylaxis use. Investing in post-exposure vaccines would be an extremely cost-effective intervention that could substantially reduce disease burden and catalyse dog vaccination efforts to eliminate dog-mediated rabies. World Health Organization. Tens of thousands of people die from dog-mediated rabies annually. Deaths can be prevented through post-exposure prophylaxis for people who have been bitten, and the disease eliminated through dog vaccination. Current post-exposure prophylaxis use saves many lives, but availability remains poor in many rabies-endemic countries due to high costs, poor access, and supply.BACKGROUNDTens of thousands of people die from dog-mediated rabies annually. Deaths can be prevented through post-exposure prophylaxis for people who have been bitten, and the disease eliminated through dog vaccination. Current post-exposure prophylaxis use saves many lives, but availability remains poor in many rabies-endemic countries due to high costs, poor access, and supply.We developed epidemiological and economic models to investigate the effect of an investment in post-exposure prophylaxis by Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance. We modelled post-exposure prophylaxis use according to the status quo, with improved access using WHO-recommended intradermal vaccination, with and without rabies immunoglobulin, and with and without dog vaccination. We took the health provider perspective, including only direct costs.METHODSWe developed epidemiological and economic models to investigate the effect of an investment in post-exposure prophylaxis by Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance. We modelled post-exposure prophylaxis use according to the status quo, with improved access using WHO-recommended intradermal vaccination, with and without rabies immunoglobulin, and with and without dog vaccination. We took the health provider perspective, including only direct costs.We predict more than 1 million deaths will occur in the 67 rabies-endemic countries considered from 2020 to 2035, under the status quo. Current post-exposure prophylaxis use prevents approximately 56 000 deaths annually. Expanded access to, and free provision of, post-exposure prophylaxis would prevent an additional 489 000 deaths between 2020 and 2035. Under this switch to efficient intradermal post-exposure prophylaxis regimens, total projected vaccine needs remain similar (about 73 million vials) yet 17·4 million more people are vaccinated, making this an extremely cost-effective method, with costs of US$635 per death averted and $33 per disability-adjusted life-years averted. Scaling up dog vaccination programmes could eliminate dog-mediated rabies over this time period; improved post-exposure prophylaxis access remains cost-effective under this scenario, especially in combination with patient risk assessments to reduce unnecessary post-exposure prophylaxis use.FINDINGSWe predict more than 1 million deaths will occur in the 67 rabies-endemic countries considered from 2020 to 2035, under the status quo. Current post-exposure prophylaxis use prevents approximately 56 000 deaths annually. Expanded access to, and free provision of, post-exposure prophylaxis would prevent an additional 489 000 deaths between 2020 and 2035. Under this switch to efficient intradermal post-exposure prophylaxis regimens, total projected vaccine needs remain similar (about 73 million vials) yet 17·4 million more people are vaccinated, making this an extremely cost-effective method, with costs of US$635 per death averted and $33 per disability-adjusted life-years averted. Scaling up dog vaccination programmes could eliminate dog-mediated rabies over this time period; improved post-exposure prophylaxis access remains cost-effective under this scenario, especially in combination with patient risk assessments to reduce unnecessary post-exposure prophylaxis use.Investing in post-exposure vaccines would be an extremely cost-effective intervention that could substantially reduce disease burden and catalyse dog vaccination efforts to eliminate dog-mediated rabies.INTERPRETATIONInvesting in post-exposure vaccines would be an extremely cost-effective intervention that could substantially reduce disease burden and catalyse dog vaccination efforts to eliminate dog-mediated rabies.World Health Organization.FUNDINGWorld Health Organization. |
| Author | Rajeev, Malavika Chitnis, Nakul Jayme, Sarah Traoré, Abdallah Changalucha, Joel Wallace, Ryan Moyengar, Ronelngar Costa, Galileu Barbosa Mwatondo, Athman Narayana, DH Ashwath Ly, Sowath Cooper, Laura Hampson, Katie Mtema, Zac Kotzé, Johann Yurachai, Onphirul Thumbi, Samuel M. Tarantola, Arnaud Lechenne, Monique Blanton, Jesse Muturi, Matthew Edosoa, Glenn T Laager, Mirjam Tenzin, Tenzin Sudarshan, Mysore Kalappa Oussiguéré, Assandi Knopf, Lea Lugelo, Ahmed Sreenivasan, Nandini Ringenier, Moniek Lushasi, Kennedy Bonfoh, Bassirou Mancy, Rebecca Baril, Laurence Briggs, Deborah Taylor, Louise Gunesekera, Amila Andriamandimby, Soa Fy Trotter, Caroline Huong, Nguyen Thi Thanh Ventura, Francesco Metcalf, Charlotte Jessica E. Zinsstag, Jakob Hattendorf, Jan Abela-Ridder, Bernadette Steenson, Rachel Wambura, Gati |
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| BackLink | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30472178$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed https://hal.science/hal-02868805$$DView record in HAL |
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| ContentType | Journal Article |
| Contributor | Rajeev, Malavika Chitnis, Nakul Jayme, Sarah Traoré, Abdallah Changalucha, Joel Wallace, Ryan Moyengar, Ronelngar Costa, Galileu Barbosa Mwatondo, Athman Ly, Sowath Cooper, Laura Hampson, Katie Mtema, Zac Thumbi, Samuel M Kotzé, Johann Yurachai, Onphirul Tarantola, Arnaud Lechenne, Monique Blanton, Jesse Muturi, Matthew Edosoa, Glenn T Laager, Mirjam Tenzin, Tenzin Sudarshan, Mysore Kalappa Oussiguéré, Assandi Knopf, Lea Lugelo, Ahmed Sreenivasan, Nandini Ringenier, Moniek Lushasi, Kennedy Bonfoh, Bassirou Mancy, Rebecca Baril, Laurence Briggs, Deborah Taylor, Louise Gunesekera, Amila Andriamandimby, Soa Fy Trotter, Caroline Huong, Nguyen Thi Thanh Ventura, Francesco Metcalf, Charlotte Jessica E Zinsstag, Jakob Hattendorf, Jan Abela-Ridder, Bernadette Narayana, Dh Ashwath Steenson, Rachel Wambura, Gati |
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| Copyright | 2019 World Health Organization This is an Open Access article published under the CC BY 3.0 IGO license which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. In any use of this article, there should be no suggestion that WHO endorses any specific organisation, products or services. The use of the WHO logo is not permitted. This notice should be preserved along with the article's original URL. Copyright Elsevier Limited Jan 2019 Attribution 2019 World Health Organization 2019 |
| Copyright_xml | – notice: 2019 World Health Organization – notice: This is an Open Access article published under the CC BY 3.0 IGO license which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. In any use of this article, there should be no suggestion that WHO endorses any specific organisation, products or services. The use of the WHO logo is not permitted. This notice should be preserved along with the article's original URL. – notice: Copyright Elsevier Limited Jan 2019 – notice: Attribution – notice: 2019 World Health Organization 2019 |
| CorporateAuthor | WHO Rabies Modelling Consortium |
| CorporateAuthor_xml | – name: WHO Rabies Modelling Consortium |
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| DOI | 10.1016/S1473-3099(18)30512-7 |
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article-title: Prevention of human rabies; treatment of persons bitten by rabid wolves in Iran publication-title: Bull World Health Organ – reference: 30472177 - Lancet Infect Dis. 2019 Jan;19(1):12-13. doi: 10.1016/S1473-3099(18)30606-6. |
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| Snippet | Tens of thousands of people die from dog-mediated rabies annually. Deaths can be prevented through post-exposure prophylaxis for people who have been bitten,... Summary Background Tens of thousands of people die from dog-mediated rabies annually. Deaths can be prevented through post-exposure prophylaxis for people who... Background: Tens of thousands of people die from dog-mediated rabies annually. Deaths can be prevented through post-exposure prophylaxis for people who have... |
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| SubjectTerms | Animal vaccines Animals Bites and Stings - virology Child, Preschool Cost-Benefit Analysis - methods Costs Dog Diseases - prevention & control Dogs Economic analysis Economic models Endemic Diseases - prevention & control Epidemiology Exposure Fatalities Female Human health and pathology Humans Immunization Immunoglobulins Immunoglobulins - therapeutic use Incidence Infectious diseases Investment policy Life Sciences Low income groups Male Models, Economic Post-Exposure Prophylaxis - economics Post-Exposure Prophylaxis - methods Prevention Production capacity Prophylaxis Quality-Adjusted Life Years Rabies Rabies - epidemiology Rabies - mortality Rabies - prevention & control Rabies - virology Rabies Vaccines - economics Rabies Vaccines - therapeutic use Rabies virus - immunology Rabies virus - isolation & purification Risk assessment Scaling Studies Vaccination - economics Vaccines World Health Organization |
| Title | The potential effect of improved provision of rabies post-exposure prophylaxis in Gavi-eligible countries: a modelling study |
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