Evaluating the impact of Respiratory Syncytial Virus immunisation strategies on antibiotic use and drug resistant bacterial infections in England

Katherine E Atkins ORCID logo; DavidHodgson; MarkJit; Nicholas GDavies; (2022) Evaluating the impact of Respiratory Syncytial Virus immunisation strategies on antibiotic use and drug resistant bacterial infections in England. Wellcome Open Research, 7. p. 286. ISSN 2398-502X DOI: 10.12688/wellcomeopenres.18183.1
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Background: Vaccines against viruses have been proposed as a novel means to reduce antibiotic use, which would, in turn, decrease selection for antibiotic resistant bacteria. However, the impact of this intervention is poorly quantified, and likely depends on setting-specific epidemiology. Therefore, with increasing confidence in a new vaccine against respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), it is important to quantify the impact of these vaccines on antibiotic prescribing and any downstream reduction in drug resistant bacterial infections. Methods: Here we integrate results from a dynamic transmission model of RSV and a statistical attribution framework to capture the impact of RSV vaccines on the reduction in antibiotic prescribing due to averted primary care visits in England. Results: Under base case assumptions, we find that the most impactful RSV vaccine strategy targets children aged 5–14 years, resulting in an annual reduction of 10.9 (8.0–14.2) antibiotic courses per 10,000 person years across the entire population, equivalent to reducing annual all-cause primary care prescribing by 0.23%. Our results suggest that this reduction in antibiotic use would gain 130 disability-adjusted life years and avert £51,000 associated with drug resistant bacterial infections. Seasonally administering monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) to high-risk infants under 6 months is the most efficient strategy, reducing per person year antibiotic prescribing by 2.6 (1.9–3.3) antibiotic courses per 1,000 mAb courses. Conclusions: Under optimistic conditions, the cost-effectiveness of RSV vaccine strategies in England would likely not be altered by integrating the benefits of preventing drug resistant infections in addition to RSV disease prevention.



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