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Derek A.T. Cummings

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Title: Derek A.T. Cummings


1
Models of New Vaccines for Measles
Derek A.T. Cummings University of Pittsburgh
Graduate School of Public Health and Johns
Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
2
Measles Virus
  • Major cause of child morbidity and mortality
  • Causes 500,000 deaths each year

3
Distribution of Global Mortality
2003 282,000 183,000 57,000 8,000 530,000
Region Africa South Asia East Asia and
Pacific Other Total
1999 519,000 263,000 77,000 14,000 873,000
MMWR, 2005
4
Current measles vaccine
  • Current vaccine is a live attenuated vaccine
    derived from passage in chick embryo cells
  • Targeted age of delivery is 9-12 months
  • Induces immunity in 85 of recipients at 9 months
    of age and 90-95 of recipients at 12 months of
    age
  • Immunogenicity in early infancy is limited by
    relative immaturity of the immune system and the
    presence of maternal antibodies

5
Can we eliminate/eradicate measles using this
vaccine?
The experience in the Americas suggests we can
6
Some of the Largest Challenges lie ahead for
Measles Control
Strebel, Nature, 2001
7
Vaccine Candidates
  • Several candidates are under development
  • Aerosol delivered vaccines that could minimize
    interference with maternal antibody and ease
    delivery
  • DNA vaccines encoding particular measles virus
    proteins with the potential to be immunogenic at
    ages as early as 2 months
  • One design goal is to be able to target earlier
    ages in the EPI schedule

8

Long history of work in measles on disease
dynamics
Data (red circles) and Model (blue line) of
weekly measles incidence in London, 1944-1965
Grenfell et al, 2001
9
RAS model of measles transmission
Mi
Si
Ei
Ii
Ri
i denotes age cohorts
10
Cohorts age together
  • Schenzles approach used to reduce system of
    partial differential equations to a system of
    ordinary differential equations
  • Age groups all age at the same time

11
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12
Force of Infection
  • As a first step, Ive used age specific forces of
    infection from the literature estimated using age
    stratified serological data in the UK and in
    Senegal

13
WAIFW Matrix
ß1 ß1 ß1 ß1 ß1 ß2 ß2 ß2 ß1
ß2 ß3 ß3 ß1 ß2 ß3 ß4
ß1 ß1 ß1 ß1 ß1 ß2 ß1 ß1 ß1
ß1 ß3 ß1 ß1 ß1 ß1 ß4




14
Age Structure of the Population
Need to incorporate younger age groups than
previous models (0-1 months, 1-2 months,2-3
months, 3-4 months, 4-5 months, 5-6 months,6-9
months, 9-12 months, 1-2 years, 2-3 years, 5-10
years, 10 and older Uniformly distribute age
specific force of infection of larger age classes
to smaller age classes Used data on the age
structure of the population in Cameroon from a
Demographics and Health Survey Set derivatives
with respect to time to zero and solved for birth
rate and age specific deaths rates that would
match age distribution
15
Comparing different age cohort structures
(red, 13 age classes, agregatedyellow, 7 age
classes,
16
Vaccination
  • Vaccination moves some portion of susceptible or
    those with maternal immunity into the removed
    class
  • Vaccination is done during the age cohort
    transitions into targeted age groups
  • As simplest case I assume new vaccine is
    delivered at 4th month (third dose of DPT)
  • Vaccination rates are higher at 4 months than 9
    months

17
Results using a vaccine given at 4 months w/ 65
efficacy (irrespective of presence of maternal
immunity compared to current vaccine delivered at
9 months with reduced efficacy in those with
maternal immunity
Equivalent vaccine efficacy is 78 With extreme
empirical estimate of increase in vaccination, 71
18
Extensions
  • Multiphase strategy
  • Incorporate vaccine efficacy at three doses
  • Incorporate empirical data on association of
    timeliness of vaccines on age of delivery
  • Create analogous stochastic model to explore
    elimination

19
Is the birth cohort large enough in these cities
so that the number of children not targeted by
the vaccine is greater than the critical
community size
20
Monthly measles incidence in Cameroon, 1997-2001
Cummings et al, IJID, 2006
21
Incidence in Northern Region
Incidence in Southern Region
22
An aside one lesson from Cameroon experience
  • The number of cases is not the best indicator of
    the state of population immunity. Susceptible
    fractions can slowly increase and lead to large
    outbreaks.
  • Public health systems should anticipate
    post-honeymoon outbreaks

23
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24
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25
The experience in the Americas is the standard.
Would models predict the elimination of measles
transmission in this region given the vaccination
coverage attained
The experience in the Americas suggests we can
26
Estimates of transmissibility of measles from
Africa are rare
Number of reported cases of measles in the urban
community of Niamey, 1 November 2003 to 6 June
2004.
Grais, Trans. Roy. Soc. of Trop. Med. and Hyg.
(2006)
27
Recent data suggest R0 is slightly lower in some
parts of Africa than historic estimates from the
UK and the US
Estimates of R0 from Niger (Grais et al)
28
  • Question for the audience-
  • How many think the elimination campaign in
    southern Africa will maintain low numbers of
    cases?
  • Do you think we can eliminate measles with the
    current vaccine?
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