The cost-effectiveness of a 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccination for infants in England.

Albert Jan van Hoek, Yoon Hong Choi, Caroline Trotter, Elizabeth Miller, Mark Jit
Author Information
  1. Albert Jan van Hoek: Immunisation, Hepatitis and Blood Safety Department, Health Protection Services, Colindale, Health Protection Agency, London NW9 5EQ, UK. albertjan.vanhoek@hpa.org.uk

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In the immunisation schedule in England and Wales, the 7-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV-7) was replaced by the 13-valent vaccine (PCV-13) in April 2010 after having been used since September 2006. The introduction of PCV-7 was informed by a cost effectiveness analysis using an infectious disease model which projected herd immunity and serotype replacement effects based on the post-vaccine experience in the United States at that time.
AIM: To investigate the cost effectiveness of the introduction of PCV-13.
METHOD: Invasive disease incidence following vaccination was projected from a dynamic infectious disease model, and combined with serotype specific disease outcomes obtained from a large hospital dataset linked to laboratory confirmation of invasive pneumococcal disease. The economic impact of replacing PCV-7 with PCV-13 was compared to stopping the use of pneumococcal conjugate vaccination altogether.
RESULTS: Discontinuing PCV-7 would lead to a projected increase in invasive pneumococcal disease, costs and loss of quality of life compared to the introduction of PCV-13. However under base case assumptions (assuming no impact on non-invasive disease, maximal competition between vaccine and non-vaccine types, time horizon of 30 years, vaccine price of £49.60 a dose+£7.50 administration costs and discounting of costs and benefits at 3.5%) the introduction of PCV-13 is only borderline cost effective compared to a scenario of discontinuing of PCV-7. The intervention becomes more cost-effective when projected impact of non-invasive disease is included or the discount factor for benefits is reduced to 1.5%.
CONCLUSION: To our knowledge this is the first evaluation of a transition from PCV-7 to PCV-13 based on a dynamic model. The cost-effectiveness of such a policy change depends on a number of crucial assumptions for which evidence is limited, particularly the impact of PCV-13 on non-invasive disease.

Grants

  1. PDA/02/06/088/Department of Health

MeSH Term

Cost-Benefit Analysis
England
Female
Humans
Infant
Male
Models, Statistical
Pneumococcal Infections
Pneumococcal Vaccines
Treatment Outcome
Vaccination

Chemicals

13-valent pneumococcal vaccine
Pneumococcal Vaccines

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0diseasePCV-13PCV-7pneumococcalvaccineintroductionprojectedimpactconjugatecostmodelvaccinationcomparedcostsnon-invasiveEngland13-valenteffectivenessinfectiousserotypebasedtimedynamicinvasiveassumptionsbenefits5%cost-effectivenessBACKGROUND:immunisationscheduleWales7-valentreplacedApril2010usedsinceSeptember2006informedanalysisusingherdimmunityreplacementeffectspost-vaccineexperienceUnitedStatesAIM:investigateMETHOD:InvasiveincidencefollowingcombinedspecificoutcomesobtainedlargehospitaldatasetlinkedlaboratoryconfirmationeconomicreplacingstoppingusealtogetherRESULTS:DiscontinuingleadincreaselossqualitylifeHoweverbasecaseassumingmaximalcompetitionnon-vaccinetypeshorizon30yearsprice£4960dose+£750administrationdiscounting3borderlineeffectivescenariodiscontinuinginterventionbecomescost-effectiveincludeddiscountfactorreduced1CONCLUSION:knowledgefirstevaluationtransitionpolicychangedependsnumbercrucialevidencelimitedparticularlyinfants

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