Egészségbiztonság Nemzeti Laboratórium(RRF-2.3.1-21-2022-00006) Támogató: NKFIH
Vaccination has proven to be the most effective public health measure in the fight
against various infectious diseases. For emerging or re-emerging diseases, a highly
efficacious vaccine may not be available at the start of an outbreak. Timelines for
availability of a safe and effective vaccine may significantly affect disease dynamics,
its burden, and the healthcare resource utilization. Mitigating this impact may then
rely on low-efficacy vaccines that may be rapidly produced and distributed to at-risk
populations at the early stages of an outbreak. With the expectation for arrival of
a more effective vaccine at a later stage of the outbreak, the optimal vaccination
coverage with the existing, low-efficacy vaccines is elusive. While flattening the
outbreak if a significant proportion of the susceptible population is vaccinated with
a low-efficacy vaccine, the overall infections may not be minimized if a small proportion
of the population left unvaccinated when a highly efficacious vaccine becomes available.
The optimal coverage for early vaccination could thus depend on several parameters
including the efficacy of the currently available vaccines, arrival timing of a more
effective vaccine and its efficacy, and the transmissibility of the disease. Here,
we develop a deterministic system of differential equations to investigate the optimal
vaccination coverage with a low-efficacy vaccine within the aforementioned parameter
space. Despite simplifying assumptions, we illustrate that minimizing the overall
infections does not necessarily correspond to the highest coverage of early vaccination.
However, a high vaccination coverage, even with a low-efficacy vaccine, may still
contribute to alleviating severe disease outcomes and reducing healthcare resource
utilization.