Authors
Thomas J Hladish, Carl AB Pearson, Dennis L Chao, Diana Patricia Rojas, Gabriel L Recchia, Héctor Gómez-Dantés, M Elizabeth Halloran, Juliet RC Pulliam, Ira M Longini
Publication date
2016/5/26
Journal
PLoS neglected tropical diseases
Volume
10
Issue
5
Pages
e0004661
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Description
Dengue vaccines will soon provide a new tool for reducing dengue disease, but the effectiveness of widespread vaccination campaigns has not yet been determined. We developed an agent-based dengue model representing movement of and transmission dynamics among people and mosquitoes in Yucatán, Mexico, and simulated various vaccine scenarios to evaluate effectiveness under those conditions. This model includes detailed spatial representation of the Yucatán population, including the location and movement of 1.8 million people between 375,000 households and 100,000 workplaces and schools. Where possible, we designed the model to use data sources with international coverage, to simplify re-parameterization for other regions. The simulation and analysis integrate 35 years of mild and severe case data (including dengue serotype when available), results of a seroprevalence survey, satellite imagery, and climatological, census, and economic data. To fit model parameters that are not directly informed by available data, such as disease reporting rates and dengue transmission parameters, we developed a parameter estimation toolkit called AbcSmc, which we have made publicly available. After fitting the simulation model to dengue case data, we forecasted transmission and assessed the relative effectiveness of several vaccination strategies over a 20 year period. Vaccine efficacy is based on phase III trial results for the Sanofi-Pasteur vaccine, Dengvaxia. We consider routine vaccination of 2, 9, or 16 year-olds, with and without a one-time catch-up campaign to age 30. Because the durability of Dengvaxia is not yet …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
TJ Hladish, CAB Pearson, DL Chao, DP Rojas… - PLoS neglected tropical diseases, 2016