Panel urges steps to boost evidence-based policy

Science         
08 September 2017  Vol 357, Issue 6355
http://www.sciencemag.org/current.dtl

Panel urges steps to boost evidence-based policy
By Jeffrey Mervis
Science08 Sep 2017 : 959 Restricted Access
Summary
A blue-ribbon panel has recommended creating a secure, digital portal for researchers who want to study the impact of federal investments on health care, education, housing, labor markets, and other sectors of the U.S. economy. A report out this week by the congressionally mandated Commission on Evidence-Based Policymaking says the new mechanism would provide researchers with one-stop shopping while increasing privacy protection for everyone in the databases created to administer the federal programs. The portal, dubbed the National Secure Data Service, would help develop and implement new safeguards to keep information confidential. Each request for data would be thoroughly vetted, as would the researchers proposing the work. In addition, the data needed for an approved project would be assembled virtually, on a temporary basis, solely for that project. The commission also recommends beefing up the government’s capacity to generate and use evidence on how its well programs work, including creating the position of chief evaluation officer, boosting training, and encouraging better coordination among the federal agencies that manage these administrative records.

The Typhoid Vaccine Acceleration Consortium (TyVAC): Vaccine effectiveness study designs: Accelerating the introduction of typhoid conjugate vaccines and reducing the global burden of enteric fever. Report from a meeting held on 26–27 October 2016, Oxford, UK

Vaccine
Volume 35, Issue 38, Pages 5081-5224 (12 September 2017)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X/35/38?sdc=1

Meeting report
The Typhoid Vaccine Acceleration Consortium (TyVAC): Vaccine effectiveness study designs: Accelerating the introduction of typhoid conjugate vaccines and reducing the global burden of enteric fever. Report from a meeting held on 26–27 October 2016, Oxford, UK
Pages 5081-5088
James E. Meiring, Malick Gibani, the TyVAC Consortium Meeting Group

Targeting a global health problem: Vaccine design and challenges for the control of tick-borne diseases

Vaccine
Volume 35, Issue 38, Pages 5081-5224 (12 September 2017)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X/35/38?sdc=1

Reviews
Targeting a global health problem: Vaccine design and challenges for the control of tick-borne diseases
Review Article
Pages 5089-5094
José de la Fuente, Marinela Contreras, Agustín Estrada-Peña, Alejandro Cabezas-Cruz
Abstract
It has been over twenty years since the first vaccines for the control of tick infestations became commercially available. These vaccines proved their efficacy and the potential of this approach for the control of tick-borne diseases (TBDs), which represent a growing burden for human and animal health worldwide. In all these years, research in this area has produced new tick-derived and pathogen-derived candidate protective antigens. However, the potential of vaccines for the control of TBDs has been underestimated due to major challenges to reduce tick infestations, pathogen infection, multiplication and transmission, tick attachment and feeding time and/or host pathogen infection. Nevertheless, vaccines constitute the most safe and effective intervention for the control of TBDs in humans, domestic and wild animals.

Challenges in immunisation service delivery for refugees in Australia: A health system perspective

Vaccine
Volume 35, Issue 38, Pages 5081-5224 (12 September 2017)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X/35/38?sdc=1

Challenges in immunisation service delivery for refugees in Australia: A health system perspective
Original Research Article
Pages 5148-5155
Mahimbo, H. Seale, M. Smith, A. Heywood
Abstract
Background
Refugees are at risk of being under-immunised in their countries of origin, in transit and post-resettlement in Australia. Whilst studies have focused on identifying barriers to accessibility of health services among refugees, few focus on providers’ perspectives on immunisation service delivery to this group. Health service providers are well placed to provide insights into the pragmatic challenges associated with refugee health service delivery, which can be useful in identifying strategies aimed at improving immunisation coverage among this group.
Methods
A qualitative study involving 30 semi-structured interviews was undertaken with key stakeholders in immunisation service delivery across all States and Territories in Australia between December 2014 and December 2015. Thematic analysis was undertaken.
Results
Variability in accessing program funding and vaccines, lack of a national policy for catch-up vaccination, unclear roles and responsibilities for catch-up, a lack of a central immunisation register and insufficient training among general practitioners were seen as the main challenges impacting on immunisation service delivery for refugees.
Conclusions
This study provides insight into the challenges that impact on effective immunisation service delivery for refugees. Deliberate strategies such as national funding for relevant vaccines, improved data collection nationally and increased guidance for general practitioners on catch-up immunisation for refugees would help to ensure equitable access across all age groups.

Oral cholera vaccine coverage in hard-to-reach fishermen communities after two mass Campaigns, Malawi, 2016

Vaccine
Volume 35, Issue 38, Pages 5081-5224 (12 September 2017)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X/35/38?sdc=1

Oral cholera vaccine coverage in hard-to-reach fishermen communities after two mass Campaigns, Malawi, 2016
Original Research Article
Pages 5194-5200
Delphine Sauvageot, Christel Saussier, Abebe Gobeze, Sikhona Chipeta, Innocent Mhango, Gift Kawalazira, Martin A. Mengel, Dominique Legros, Philippe Cavailler, Maurice M’bang’ombe
Abstract
Context
From December 2015 to August 2016, a large epidemic of cholera affected the fishermen of Lake Chilwa in Malawi. A first reactive Oral Cholera Vaccines (OCV) campaign was organized, in February, in a 2 km radius of the lake followed by a preemptive one, conducted in November, in a 25 km radius. We present the vaccine coverage reached in hard-to-reach population using simplified delivery strategies.
Method
We conducted two-stage random-sampling cross-sectional surveys among individuals living in a 2 km and 25 km radius of Lake Chilwa (islands and floating homes included). Individuals aged 12 months and older from Machinga and Zomba districts were sampled: 43 clusters of 14 households were surveyed. Simplified strategies were used for those living in islands and floating homes: self- delivery and community-supervised delivery of the second dose. Vaccine coverage (VC) for at-least-two-doses was estimated taking into account sampling weights and design effects.
Results
A total of 1176 households were surveyed (2.7% of non-response). Among the 2833 individuals living in the 2 km radius of Lake and the 2915 in the 25 km radius: 457 (16.1%) and 239 (8.2%) lived in floating homes or on islands at some point in the year, respectively. For the overall population, VC was 75.6% and 54.2%, respectively. In the 2 km radius, VC was 92.2% for those living on the lake at some point of the year: 271 (64.8%) used the simplified strategies. The main reasons for non-vaccination were absence during the campaign and vaccine shortage. Few adverse events occurring in the 24 h following vaccination was reported.
Conclusions
We reached a high two-dose coverage of the most at-risk population using simplified delivery strategies. Because of the high fishermen mobility, regular catch-up campaigns or another strategy specifically targeting fishermen need to be assessed for more efficient vaccines use.

Impact of rotavirus vaccination on rotavirus and all-cause gastroenteritis in peri-urban Kenyan children

Vaccine
Volume 35, Issue 38, Pages 5081-5224 (12 September 2017)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X/35/38?sdc=1

Impact of rotavirus vaccination on rotavirus and all-cause gastroenteritis in peri-urban Kenyan children
Original Research Article
Pages 5217-5223
Ernest Apondi Wandera, Shah Mohammad, Martin Bundi, Satoshi Komoto, James Nyangao, Cyrus Kathiiko, Erick Odoyo, Gabriel Miring’u, Koki Taniguchi, Yoshio Ichinose
Abstract
A monovalent rotavirus vaccine (RV1) was introduced into the National Immunization Program in Kenya in July 2014. We examined the impact of the vaccine on hospitalization for all-cause acute gastroenteritis (AGE) and rotavirus-specific AGE and strain distribution at a large referral hospital which serves a predominantly peri-urban population in Central Kenya. Data on rotavirus AGE and strain distribution were derived from ongoing hospital-based AGE surveillance. Hospital administrative data were used to compare trends in all-cause AGE. Pre-vaccine (July 2009–June 2014) and post-vaccine (July 2014–June 2016) periods were compared for changes in hospitalization for all-cause AGE and rotavirus AGE and strain distribution. Following the vaccine introduction, the proportion of children aged <5 years hospitalized for rotavirus declined by 30% (95% CI: 19–45%) in the first year and 64% (95% CI: 49–77%) in the second year. Reductions in rotavirus positivity were most pronounced among the vaccine-eligible group (<12 months) in the first year post-vaccination at 42% (95% CI: 28–56%). Greater reductions of 67% (95% CI: 51–79%) were seen in the second year in the 12–23 months age group. Similarly, hospitalizations for all-cause AGE among children <5 years of age decreased by 31% (95% CI: 24–40%) in the first year and 58% (95% CI: 49–67%) in the second year of vaccine introduction. Seasonal peaks of rotavirus and all-cause AGE were reduced substantially. There was an increased detection of G2P[4], G3P[6] and G3P[8], which coincided temporally with the timing of the vaccine introduction. Thus, introducing the rotavirus vaccine into the routine immunization program in Kenya has resulted in a notable decline in rotavirus and all-cause AGE hospitalizations in Central Kenya. This provides early evidence for public health policy makers in Kenya to support the sustained use of the rotavirus vaccine in routine immunizations.

A Review of the Safety and Efficacy of Vaccines as Prophylaxis for Clostridium difficile Infections

Vaccines — Open Access Journal
http://www.mdpi.com/journal/vaccines
(Accessed 9 September 2017)

Review
A Review of the Safety and Efficacy of Vaccines as Prophylaxis for Clostridium difficile Infections
by Mackenzie Henderson, Amanda Bragg, Germin Fahim, Monica Shah and Evelyn R. Hermes-DeSantis
Vaccines 2017, 5(3), 25; doi:10.3390/vaccines5030025 – 2 September 2017
Abstract
This review aims to evaluate the literature on the safety and efficacy of novel toxoid vaccines for the prophylaxis of Clostridium difficile infections (CDI) in healthy adults. Literature searches for clinical trials were performed through MEDLINE, ClinicalTrials.gov, and Web of Science using the keywords bacterial vaccines, Clostridium difficile, and vaccine. English-language clinical trials evaluating the efficacy and/or safety of Clostridium difficile toxoid vaccines that were completed and had results posted on ClinicalTrials.gov or in a published journal article were included. Six clinical trials were included. The vaccines were associated with mild self-reported adverse reactions, most commonly injection site reactions and flu-like symptoms, and minimal serious adverse events. Five clinical trials found marked increases in antibody production in vaccinated participants following each dose of the vaccine. Clinical trials evaluating C. difficile toxoid vaccines have shown them to be well tolerated and relatively safe. Surrogate markers of efficacy (seroconversion and geometric mean antibody levels) have shown significant immune responses to a vaccination series in healthy adults, indicating that they have the potential to be used as prophylaxis for CDI. However, more research is needed to determine the clinical benefits of the vaccines.

From Google Scholar & other sources: Selected Journal Articles, Newsletters, Dissertations, Theses, Commentary

From Google Scholar & other sources: Selected Journal Articles, Newsletters, Dissertations, Theses, Commentary
 
 
Journal of Leukocyte Biology
Published online before print September 1, 2017, doi:
The potential of the microbiota to influence vaccine responses
DJ Lynn, B Pulendran –
Abstract
After clean water, vaccines are the primary public health intervention providing protection against serious infectious diseases. Antigen-specific antibody-mediated responses play a critical role in the protection conferred by vaccination; however these responses are highly variable among individuals. In addition, vaccine immunogenicity is frequently impaired in developing world populations, for reasons that are poorly understood. Although the factors that are associated with interindividual variation in vaccine responses are likely manifold, emerging evidence from mouse models and studies in human populations now suggests that the gut microbiome plays a key role in shaping systemic immune responses to both orally and parenterally administered vaccines. Herein, we review the evidence to date that the microbiota can influence vaccine responses and discuss the potential mechanisms through which these effects may be mediated. In addition, we highlight the gaps in this evidence and suggest future directions for research.

Media/Policy Watch

Media/Policy Watch

This watch section is intended to alert readers to substantive news, analysis and opinion from the general media and selected think tanks and similar organizations on vaccines, immunization, global public health and related themes. Media Watch is not intended to be exhaustive, but indicative of themes and issues CVEP is actively tracking. This section will grow from an initial base of newspapers, magazines and blog sources, and is segregated from Journal Watch above which scans the peer-reviewed journal ecology.

We acknowledge the Western/Northern bias in this initial selection of titles and invite suggestions for expanded coverage. We are conservative in our outlook in adding news sources which largely report on primary content we are already covering above. Many electronic media sources have tiered, fee-based subscription models for access. We will provide full-text where content is published without restriction, but most publications require registration and some subscription level.
 
 
Financial Times
http://www.ft.com/home/uk
Biotech
Secretive Moderna yet to convince on $5bn valuation
Biotech hopes to turn our bodies into ‘drug factories’ able to create own cure
September 6, 2017
 
Middle East & North Africa
Yemenis fight for survival in country on the brink of famine
Millions of lives at risk as civil war leads to cholera epidemic and food shortages
September 8, 2017
 
Forbes
http://www.forbes.com/
Accessed 9 September 2017
Personalized Cancer Vaccine Company Raises $93 Million
Matthew Herper, Forbes Staff
Venture funds seeded by drug giant Eli Lilly and search behemoth Alphabet are giving $92.7 million to a startup that aims to use machine learning to create personalized treatments for lung and stomach cancer… Gritstone Oncology, based in Emeryville, Calif., will use the money to build a 43,000-square-foot manufacturing facility for its treatments, and to fund clinical trials in human beings, which have not begun yet and are expected to start in the middle of next year.     Gritstone had previously raised $103 million; Andrew Allen, its chief executive, says that about $15 million of those funds remained. The new funds will take Gritstone through its first clinical trial results, expected at the end of 2019, Allen says…

 
New Yorker
http://www.newyorker.com/
Accessed 9 September 2017
Elements
Is Zika Gone for Good?
The virus caused widespread illness and fear in 2016, but it has virtually disappeared from the continental United States. Why?
By Jerome Groopman
September 2, 2017

New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/
Accessed 9 September 2017
For Meningitis B Vaccines, Climbing Revenue, and Plenty of Skepticism
Two drug firms have developed pricey vaccines they are advertising widely on TV, raising concerns among experts that they are stoking parents’ fears about a rare disease unnecessarily.
September 07, 2017 – By SHEFALI LUTHRA
 
Wall Street Journal
http://online.wsj.com/home-page?_wsjregion=na,us&_homepage=/home/us
Accessed 9 September 2017
Business
Sanofi Stops Work on Two Zika Vaccines
By Peter Loftus
Sep. 6, 2017 5:41 pm ET
Drugmaker Sanofi has ended its development of two Zika virus vaccines, citing a decline in new infections and limits on U.S. government funding.

Vaccines and Global Health: The Week in Review 2 September 2017

Vaccines and Global Health: The Week in Review is a weekly digest  summarizing news, events, announcements, peer-reviewed articles and research in the global vaccine ethics and policy space. Content is aggregated from key governmental, NGO, international organization and industry sources, key peer-reviewed journals, and other media channels. This summary proceeds from the broad base of themes and issues monitored by the Center for Vaccine Ethics & Policy in its work: it is not intended to be exhaustive in its coverage. You are viewing the blog version of our weekly digest, typically comprised of between 30 and 40 posts below all dated with the current issue date

.– Request an Email Summary: Vaccines and Global Health : The Week in Review is published as a single email summary, scheduled for release each Saturday evening before midnight (EDT in the U.S.). If you would like to receive the email version, please send your request to david.r.curry@centerforvaccineethicsandpolicy.org.

 pdf version A pdf of the current issue is available here: Vaccines and Global Health_The Week in Review_2 September 2017

– blog edition: comprised of the approx. 35+ entries posted below.

– Twitter:  Readers can also follow developments on twitter: @vaxethicspolicy.
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– Links:  We endeavor to test each link as we incorporate it into any post, but recognize that some links may become “stale” as publications and websites reorganize content over time. We apologize in advance for any links that may not be operative. We believe the contextual information in a given post should allow retrieval, but please contact us as above for assistance if necessary.

Support this knowledge-sharing service: Your financial support helps us cover our costs and to address a current shortfall in our annual operating budget. Click here to donate and thank you in advance for your contribution.

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David R. Curry, MS
Executive Director
Center for Vaccine Ethics and Policy

Milestones :: Perspectives

Milestones :: Perspectives
 
Opinion: We need more ambitious global health targets
By Seth Berkley
Devex – Focus On: Global Health
25 August 2017
If you’re going to try to make the world a better place, it’s important to think big and aim high. Combating climate change, protecting the world’s fish stocks or ending extreme poverty, hunger and gender inequality by 2030 are global goals that do precisely this. But while achievable, the ability of governments to meet these targets, and all 17 Sustainable Development Goals promised by all world leaders, is dependent not just on the goals and their targets themselves, but on how ambitiously we measure our progress toward reaching them.

For the global health targets of ending preventable deaths of under 5 and achieving universal health coverage with access to affordable and essential vaccines for all, which are all part of SDG 3, that could be a problem. In fact, we may already be in danger of setting ourselves up to fail even before we’ve barely begun. A lack of ambition in how we measure progress toward these SDG 3 targets will not only give us a false assessment of how well we’re doing, but could also hamper our chances of success, putting the lives of millions of the most vulnerable children at risk in the process.

Keeping track of how many children receive two doses of a measles-containing vaccine is currently the SDG 3 progress indicator being considered for these two targets. At first glance, this may seem like a sensible choice; an immunization indicator is a great idea because it is universal and has such a direct impact on reducing childhood mortality. Also, measles, is an important vaccine that has been saving lives for more than half a century, and is already used as a tracer vaccine to gauge how many children have access to routine immunization, so a reporting system is already in place. The problem is MCV2 alone simply doesn’t go far enough.
It’s the equivalent of assessing the health of the oceans only on acidity samples taken from around our coastlines, or measuring poverty by only counting those people living in households that already have access to basic services. If we did this, then we’d end up with a very incomplete picture. It is the same with our immunization health indicators.

While measles is a certainly a big killer, claiming more than 130,000 lives every year — mainly children — there are new vaccines that can have a potentially even bigger impact on reducing childhood mortality, vaccines such as pneumococcal conjugate vaccine and rotavirus. Yet, despite protecting against the two biggest killers of under 5, pneumonia and diarrhea, they are relatively recently introduced vaccines and so coverage is still relatively low, at 42 percent and 25 percent, respectively. Other vaccines protect against cancer, meningitis and birth defects. Our worry now is that if we base progress purely on MCV2, then we could end up in a situation where we think we are doing better than we actually are, and in doing so miss the opportunity to save more lives.

The World Health Organization currently recommends that all children are vaccinated to protect them against 11 different infectious diseases. Confining our measurement to just one of those antigens will not capture how many children are fully immunized. Today, global coverage of children receiving MCV2 stands at 64 percent, suggesting that one-third of all children are missing out. But if you instead look at how many children are receiving all of the 11 antigens, then a very different picture emerges. Based on Gavi’s best analysis just 7 percent of the children living in the 73 world’s poorest countries — those we need to be focusing on to decrease child mortality — are fully immunized. This means we have considerably further to go to meet our targets than MCV2 alone would suggest, with more than nine out of 10 children not getting the minimum protection against infectious diseases.

So why isn’t the global health community considering using the proportion of fully immunized children to track progress instead? One reason is that it’s a lot more difficult, both to measure and to achieve. Today immunization coverage data is based on how many vaccine doses are given, rather than counting the number vaccines each child has received. Given that one-in-three children don’t officially exist, because their birth was not formally registered, it’s easy to see why. And even though more children have vaccination cards than birth certificates, the systems that would be needed to monitor these generally do not exist.

But with a little help from technology they could. The technology sector is already striving to achieve global penetration, reaching everyone. So, it’s quite conceivable that we could have new and affordable digital ID systems capable of working in poorly resourced settings, even where there is no reliable electricity. By leapfrogging existing and often archaic paper-based methods used to certify births we will improve our ability to reach everyone and keep track of those that are missing out, whether they are living in remote village or urban slums. This is not just wishful thinking; SDG 16 already demands it, with everyone on this planet required to have a legal form of identity by 2030.

Ultimately, MCV2 alone will simply not cut it. We need to be more ambitious. Even choosing one of the powerful new vaccines that are making a difference in child mortality would make more of a difference. But going even further and making the child the focal point of immunization monitoring would be nothing short of revolutionary. Not only will it help radically reduce childhood mortality, but it will represent a significant step toward the WHO’s goal of achieving universal health coverage, which aims to ensure that everyone has access to affordable, quality health care — no matter who they are or where they live — and that includes ensuring every child has access to the most cost-effective health intervention and is fully immunized.

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Progress and Challenges with Achieving Universal Immunization Coverage: 2016 Estimates of Immunization Coverage
WHO/UNICEF Estimates of National Immunization Coverage (Data as of July 2017)
[Excerpts]
DTP3 coverage remains at 86% in 2016, leaving 19.5 million children vulnerable to vaccine preventable diseases.
86% of the world’s children received the required 3 doses of diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis containing vaccines (DTP3) in 2016, a coverage level that has remained stable at about 85% since 2010. As a result, 19.5 million children did not receive routine life-saving vaccinations. This falls short of global immunization targets.
In 2012, all 194 WHO Member States endorsed the Global Vaccine Action Plan (GVAP) and
committed to ensuring no one misses out on vital immunizations, with a target of achieving 90% DTP3 vaccination coverage in all countries by 2015.
Unvaccinated includes all children that didn’t complete the three-dose schedule of a diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis containing vaccine, as well those that didn’t receive any dose of the same
vaccine

1 in ten children remain unreached by immunization programmes
The recently released vaccination coverage estimates also suggest that about 1 in 10 infants worldwide do not have access to vaccination, not having received even the first DTP-containing vaccine dose (DTP1). Most of the children that remain un-immunized are the same ones missed by health systems.

To reach GVAP objectives, nearly 10 million additional infants would need to have been vaccinated in 2016
If all countries are to reach at least 90% DTP3 vaccination coverage, 9.9 million additional
children would need to be vaccinated in 64 countries. Three in four of these children live in fragile countries, including countries that are affected by conflict; 4 out of 10 live in the three countries that have yet to interrupt polio transmission, namely Nigeria, Afghanistan and Pakistan….
 
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Bulletin of the World Health Organization
Volume 95, Number 9, September 2017, 609-664
http://www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/95/9/en/
RESEARCH
Estimated economic impact of vaccinations in 73 low- and middle-income countries, 2001–2020
Sachiko Ozawa, Samantha Clark, Allison Portnoy, Simrun Grewal, Meghan L Stack, Anushua Sinha, Andrew Mirelman, Heather Franklin, Ingrid K Friberg, Yvonne Tam, Neff Walker, Andrew Clark, Matthew Ferrari, Chutima Suraratdecha, Steven Sweet, Sue J Goldie, Tini Garske, Michelle Li, Peter M Hansen, Hope L Johnson & Damian Walker
http://dx.doi.org/10.2471/BLT.16.178475
Abstract [HTML]
Objective
To estimate the economic impact likely to be achieved by efforts to vaccinate against 10 vaccine-preventable diseases between 2001 and 2020 in 73 low- and middle-income countries largely supported by Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance.
Methods
We used health impact models to estimate the economic impact of achieving forecasted coverages for vaccination against Haemophilus influenzae type b, hepatitis B, human papillomavirus, Japanese encephalitis, measles, Neisseria meningitidis serogroup A, rotavirus, rubella, Streptococcus pneumoniae and yellow fever. In comparison with no vaccination, we modelled the costs – expressed in 2010 United States dollars (US$) – of averted treatment, transportation costs, productivity losses of caregivers and productivity losses due to disability and death. We used the value-of-a-life-year method to estimate the broader economic and social value of living longer, in better health, as a result of immunization.
Findings
We estimated that, in the 73 countries, vaccinations given between 2001 and 2020 will avert over 20 million deaths and save US$ 350 billion in cost of illness. The deaths and disability prevented by vaccinations given during the two decades will result in estimated lifelong productivity gains totalling US$ 330 billion and US$ 9 billion, respectively. Over the lifetimes of the vaccinated cohorts, the same vaccinations will save an estimated US$ 5 billion in treatment costs. The broader economic and social value of these vaccinations is estimated at US$ 820 billion.
Conclusion
By preventing significant costs and potentially increasing economic productivity among some of the world’s poorest countries, the impact of immunization goes well beyond health
 
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FDA approval brings first gene therapy to the United States
CAR T-cell therapy approved to treat certain children and young adults with B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia
August 30, 2017   FDA News Release

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued a historic action today making the first gene therapy available in the United States, ushering in a new approach to the treatment of cancer and other serious and life-threatening diseases.

The FDA approved Kymriah (tisagenlecleucel) for certain pediatric and young adult patients with a form of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL).

“We’re entering a new frontier in medical innovation with the ability to reprogram a patient’s own cells to attack a deadly cancer,” said FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb, M.D. “New technologies such as gene and cell therapies hold out the potential to transform medicine and create an inflection point in our ability to treat and even cure many intractable illnesses. At the FDA, we’re committed to helping expedite the development and review of groundbreaking treatments that have the potential to be life-saving.”

Kymriah, a cell-based gene therapy, is approved in the United States for the treatment of patients up to 25 years of age with B-cell precursor ALL that is refractory or in second or later relapse.

Kymriah is a genetically-modified autologous T-cell immunotherapy. Each dose of Kymriah is a customized treatment created using an individual patient’s own T-cells, a type of white blood cell known as a lymphocyte. The patient’s T-cells are collected and sent to a manufacturing center where they are genetically modified to include a new gene that contains a specific protein (a chimeric antigen receptor or CAR) that directs the T-cells to target and kill leukemia cells that have a specific antigen (CD19) on the surface. Once the cells are modified, they are infused back into the patient to kill the cancer cells.

ALL is a cancer of the bone marrow and blood, in which the body makes abnormal lymphocytes. The disease progresses quickly and is the most common childhood cancer in the U.S. The National Cancer Institute estimates that approximately 3,100 patients aged 20 and younger are diagnosed with ALL each year. ALL can be of either T- or B-cell origin, with B-cell the most common. Kymriah is approved for use in pediatric and young adult patients with B-cell ALL and is intended for patients whose cancer has not responded to or has returned after initial treatment, which occurs in an estimated 15-20 percent of patients.

“Kymriah is a first-of-its-kind treatment approach that fills an important unmet need for children and young adults with this serious disease,” said Peter Marks, M.D., Ph.D., director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER). “Not only does Kymriah provide these patients with a new treatment option where very limited options existed, but a treatment option that has shown promising remission and survival rates in clinical trials.”

The safety and efficacy of Kymriah were demonstrated in one multicenter clinical trial of 63 pediatric and young adult patients with relapsed or refractory B-cell precursor ALL. The overall remission rate within three months of treatment was 83 percent.

Treatment with Kymriah has the potential to cause severe side effects. It carries a boxed warning for cytokine release syndrome (CRS), which is a systemic response to the activation and proliferation of CAR T-cells causing high fever and flu-like symptoms, and for neurological events. Both CRS and neurological events can be life-threatening. Other severe side effects of Kymriah include serious infections, low blood pressure (hypotension), acute kidney injury, fever, and decreased oxygen (hypoxia). Most symptoms appear within one to 22 days following infusion of Kymriah. Since the CD19 antigen is also present on normal B-cells, and Kymriah will also destroy those normal B cells that produce antibodies, there may be an increased risk of infections for a prolonged period of time.

The FDA today also expanded the approval of Actemra (tocilizumab) to treat CAR T-cell-induced severe or life-threatening CRS in patients 2 years of age or older. In clinical trials in patients treated with CAR-T cells, 69 percent of patients had complete resolution of CRS within two weeks following one or two doses of Actemra.

Because of the risk of CRS and neurological events, Kymriah is being approved with a risk evaluation and mitigation strategy (REMS), which includes elements to assure safe use (ETASU). The FDA is requiring that hospitals and their associated clinics that dispense Kymriah be specially certified. As part of that certification, staff involved in the prescribing, dispensing, or administering of Kymriah are required to be trained to recognize and manage CRS and neurological events. Additionally, the certified health care settings are required to have protocols in place to ensure that Kymriah is only given to patients after verifying that tocilizumab is available for immediate administration. The REMS program specifies that patients be informed of the signs and symptoms of CRS and neurological toxicities following infusion – and of the importance of promptly returning to the treatment site if they develop fever or other adverse reactions after receiving treatment with Kymriah.

To further evaluate the long-term safety, Novartis is also required to conduct a post-marketing observational study involving patients treated with Kymriah.

The FDA granted Kymriah Priority Review and Breakthrough Therapy designations. The Kymriah application was reviewed using a coordinated, cross-agency approach. The clinical review was coordinated by the FDA’s Oncology Center of Excellence, while CBER conducted all other aspects of review and made the final product approval determination.

The FDA granted approval of Kymriah to Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corp. The FDA granted the expanded approval of Actemra to Genentech Inc.

Emergencies

Emergencies
 
POLIO
Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC)
Polio this week as of 30 August 2017 [GPEI]
:: Pakistan and Afghanistan polio eradication teams convened last week in Islamabad to follow up on the southern corridor (Quetta Block – Greater Kandahar) joint planning for the upcoming low transmission season. The meeting was attended by the national teams as well as the staff from the southern region of Afghanistan and Balochistan province of Pakistan.

:: Summary of newly-reported viruses this week: Pakistan: two new wild poliovirus type 1 (WPV1) environmental positive samples; Syria:  six new circulating vaccine-derived poliovirus type 2 (cVDPV2) cases; and, DR Congo:  one new cVDPV2 case…  Additionally, pre-notification was received this week of a new WPV1 case from Karachi, Pakistan, the first in Karachi since January 2016.  The case will be officially reflected in next week’s global data reporting.

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UN OCHA – L3 Emergencies
The UN and its humanitarian partners are currently responding to three ‘L3’ emergencies. This is the global humanitarian system’s classification for the response to the most severe, large-scale humanitarian crises. 

Iraq
:: Iraq: Humanitarian Bulletin, August 2017 | Issued on 1 September
:: OCHA Iraq | Telafar Flash Update #2: Telafar Humanitarian Response, 29 August 2017 [AR/KU]

Syrian Arab Republic
:: 31 Aug 2017  Syria Operation Overview (August 2017)
:: Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, Stephen O’Brien, Statement to the Security Council on Syria, 30 August 2017  30 Aug 2017

::::::

UN OCHA – Corporate Emergencies
When the USG/ERC declares a Corporate Emergency Response, all OCHA offices, branches and sections provide their full support to response activities both at HQ and in the field.

Nigeria 
:: Nigeria – North-East Flash Update No. 1 – Cholera Outbreak, 1 September 2017

Somalia  
:: 31 Aug 2017  Somalia: Threat of famine persists
:: Humanitarian Bulletin Somalia August 2017 | Issued on 31 August 2017

::::::
::::::
 
Editor’s Note:
We will cluster these recent emergencies as below and continue to monitor the WHO webpages for updates and key developments.
 
MERS-CoV [to 2 September 2017]
http://www.who.int/emergencies/mers-cov/en/
DONS
Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) – United Arab Emirates 28 August 2017

Yellow Fever  [to 2 September 2017]
http://www.who.int/csr/disease/yellowfev/en/
DONS
Yellow fever – France – French Guiana  30 August 2017
On 22 August 2017, the National IHR Focal Point for France notified a confirmed fatal case of yellow fever in a 43-year-old Brazilian woman in French Guiana, with an unknown vaccination status…
 

WHO & Regional Offices [to 2 September 2017]

WHO & Regional Offices [to 2 September 2017]

Rapidly responding to cholera in north-eastern Nigeria
30 August 2017 – WHO and partners are moving swiftly to help health authorities contain a cholera outbreak in a camp for internally displaced people in north-eastern Nigeria. A total of 69 cases have been reported in a camp on the outskirts of the state capital Maiduguri, which is home to 44 000 people displaced by conflict and famine.

Sixty-Seventh WHO Regional Committee for Africa
28 August 2017 – WHO Director-General Dr Tedros’ remarks at the Sixty-Seventh WHO Regional Committee for Africa

::::::

Weekly Epidemiological Record, 1 September 2017, vol. 92, 35 (pp. 501–520)
Global leprosy update, 2016: accelerating reduction of disease burden

::::::
 
WHO Regional Offices
Selected Press Releases, Announcements
WHO African Region AFRO
:: Sixty-seventh session of the WHO Regional Committee for Africa
The Sixty-seventh session of the WHO Regional Committee for Africa is taking place in Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe, from 28 August to 01 September 2017. The Regional Committee, comprising health ministers from the 47 countries in the Region, is the Governing Body of WHO in the African Region.
:: NigeriaState governments garner support for 2017-18 Measles vaccination campaign.
01 September 2017
:: NigeriaWHO provides unprecedented support to Nigeria’s Coordination Center to close perennial routine immunization gaps  01 September 2017
:: UgandaMinistry of Health and partners gear up to control and eliminate Schistosomiasis in Uganda  31 August 2017
:: NigeriaWHO and partners supporting health authorities rapidly respond to Cholera outbreak in North-Eastern Nigeria  30 August 2017
 
WHO South-East Asia Region SEARO
:: 70th Regional Committee session of WHO South-East Asia Region

Building health systems resilient to climate change, improving access to essential medicines for all and intensifying efforts to end tuberculosis are among key issues that will be discussed next week at a meeting of health ministers of WHO South-East Asia Region, home to nearly a quarter of the global population.

WHO European Region EURO
:: WHO Director-General makes first visit to WHO/Europe in Copenhagen 01-09-2017
:: Transforming primary care services in Kazakhstan 01-09-2017
::  Regional Committee: making decisions on key health priorities for the European Region 29-08-2017
:: Towards tobacco-free generations: children neurobiologically vulnerable to nicotine but still a target of tobacco marketing 29-08-2017
 
WHO Western Pacific Region
:: Pacific health ministers gather to address islands’ key health challenges, solutions
RAROTONGA, Cook Islands, 29 August 2017 – Health ministers from 20 Pacific island countries and areas convened yesterday in the Cook Islands for the 12th Pacific Health Ministers Meeting. The biennial gathering seeks to reaffirm the importance of the Healthy Islands vision in promoting and protecting the health of the Pacific islands people.

CDC/ACIP [to 2 September 2017]

CDC/ACIP [to 2 September 2017]
http://www.cdc.gov/media/index.html

Tuesday, August 29, 2017
Forum on the Diagnosis, Evaluation, and Management of Zika Virus Infection among Infants – Media Advisory

Friday, September 01, 2017
CDC Emergency Operations Center activates to support response to Hurricane Harvey

MMWR News Synopsis for August 31, 2017
:: Awareness, Beliefs, and Actions Concerning Zika Virus Among Pregnant Women and Community Members — U.S. Virgin Islands, November–December 2016
Building in a rapid assessment during an outbreak response offers essential information to local public health authorities about their interventions. This feedback can improve communication and intervention strategies that inform and protect people. From November 15 to December 9, 2016, as part of a collaboration with the CDC, the U.S. Virgin Islands Department of Health conducted interviews with 269 pregnant women and community members living in the U.S.V.I. to assess awareness, beliefs, and actions related to Zika virus and local prevention and control efforts. Most respondents said they believed Zika to be a serious health concern but many were not aware of how Zika is or spread. Information collected enabled program planners to tailor efforts to address needs related to mosquito control, and also provided feedback about how messages were being received, perceived, and acted upon. Recognizing prevention program strengths and deficiencies allowed program planners to reframe and refocus messaging to educate the public about Zika transmission and emphasize protective actions.

Announcements

Announcements
 
FDA [to 2 September 2017]
http://www.fda.gov/NewsEvents/Newsroom/PressAnnouncements/default.htm
Selected Press Announcements
August 31, 2017 –
Statement from Center for Drug Evaluation and Research Director Janet Woodcock regarding safety concerns related to investigational use of Keytruda in multiple myeloma

August 30, 2017 –
FDA approval brings first gene therapy to the United States

August 29, 2017 –
FDA approves new antibacterial drug

FDA approves first U.S. treatment for Chagas disease

August 28, 2017 –
Statement from FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb, M.D. on the FDA’s new policy steps and enforcement efforts to ensure proper oversight of stem cell therapies and regenerative medicine
 
IAVI  [to 2 September 2017]
https://www.iavi.org/
August 15, 2017
IAVI Partnership with MSD Aims to Improve HIV Prevention for People Who Need it Most
IAVI ramped up its efforts to engage communities to better understand the future of HIV prevention this month with the addition of three Richard T. Clark (RTC) Fellows as part of the 2017 MSD Fellowship for Global Health.
The program seeks to build non-governmental organizations’ (NGO) capacity and to make sustainable and systematic improvements in health-service delivery for people in greatest need. IAVI was one of 10 NGOs selected to participate in the program this year, and the Fellows will support IAVI’s mission to develop HIV vaccines and other prevention modalities for people who bear the greatest burden of HIV globally – particularly women, youth, men who have sex with men, sex workers, and mobile communities in sub-Saharan Africa….

August 14, 2017
The Right APPROACH: IAVI Clinical Network Helps Janssen Assess Promising Mosaic HIV Vaccine
Scientists at the International AIDS Society conference in Paris recently announced that in an early-stage clinical trial, a new HIV vaccine regimen generated antibody responses in 100 percent of volunteers in most arms of the study. The global pharmaceutical company Janssen led the trial, known as APPROACH, which amongst others is supported by the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative (IAVI) and its clinical research center (CRC) partners in Africa. Volunteers recruited by PSF in Kigali, Rwanda, and UVRI-IAVI in Entebbe, Uganda – both part of the IAVI-Africa Clinical Research Network – were among those who participated.
Paul Stoffels, Chief Scientific Officer at Janssen’s parent company Johnson & Johnson, said in a press release: “In recent years, a new optimism has emerged that we will find an effective HIV vaccine in our lifetime. The results from today’s study add to that belief and we look forward to advancing to the next stage of clinical development as quickly as possible.”…
 
MSF/Médecins Sans Frontières  [to 2 September 2017]
http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/news-stories/press/press-releases
Press release
Drug to Treat Chagas Disease to Become Available in the U.S.
August 31, 2017
Pharmaceutical company Chemo Group announced today that it will make a drug to treat the neglected tropical disease Chagas available to people in the United States. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) approval of the drug, benznidazole, means that Chagas pediatric patients in the U.S. could receive access to a therapy that Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has been using for decades to treat people living with Chagas across Latin America. Though Chagas affects an estimated 300,000 people in the U.S., the treatment was previously only available through the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and was not FDA approved.
 
NIH  [to 2 September 2017]
http://www.nih.gov/news-events/news-releases
August 30, 2017
Sequencing all 24 human chromosomes uncovers rare disorders
— Study from NIH and other institutions may help improve prenatal genetic screening

August 30, 2017
NIAID scientists illuminate mechanism of increased cardiovascular risks with HIV
— Tick saliva molecule blocks process in human cells, nonhuman primates.

UNAIDS [to 2 September 2017]
http://www.unaids.org/en
Statement
WHO, UNAIDS STATEMENT ON HIV TESTING SERVICES: NEW OPPORTUNITIES AND
ONGOING CHALLENGES
29 August 2017 :: 8 pages
PDF: http://www.unaids.org/sites/default/files/media_asset/2017_WHO-UNAIDS_statement_HIV-testing-services_en.pdf
…WHO and UNAIDS do not support mandatory or compulsory testing of individuals on public health grounds. HIV testing, no matter how it is delivered, must always respect personal choice and adhere to ethical and human rights principles…
 
UNICEF  [to 2 September 2017]
https://www.unicef.org/media/
Selected News Releases
UNICEF scaling up its emergency response in Bangladesh
DHAKA, 31 August 2017 – UNICEF with partners are scaling up the emergency response in the flood-affected northern and central parts of Bangladesh. UNICEF is also providing urgent support in Cox’s Bazar district with the recent influx of Rohingya children and their families. Children are the hardest hit and require the support to survive and outlive the physical and mental trauma of flood and displacement.

More than 180 million people lack basic drinking water in countries ravaged by conflict or unrest – UNICEF
NEW YORK/STOCKHOLM, 29 August 2017 – More than 180 million people do not have access to basic drinking water in countries affected by conflict, violence and instability* around the world, UNICEF warned today, as World Water Week gets under way.

Spread of acute watery diarrhoea and suspected cholera slows in Yemen amid unprecedented response efforts from unsung local heroes
AMMAN/SANA’A, 28 August, 2017 – The Yemeni people continue to be hit by an unprecedented and mostly man-made humanitarian crisis. Amid the suffering, ordinary Yemenis are leading a heroic daily fight against acute watery diarrhoea and cholera which is now paying off.
 
Wellcome Trust  [to 2 September 2017]
https://wellcome.ac.uk/news
News / Published: 29 August 2017
UK science centres get £13 million for public engagement
Wellcome is giving £13 million in funding to five science centres around the UK to encourage new and different ideas that will help to make science more accessible. 
The funding has been awarded through the Inspiring Science Fund.
 
::::::
 
DCVMN – Developing Country Vaccine Manufacturers Network  [to 2 September 2017]
http://www.dcvmn.org/
25 September 2017 to 28 September 2017
DCVMN Annual General Meeting
Seoul / Korea
 
PhRMA    [to 2 September 2017]
http://www.phrma.org/press-room
August 30, 2017
PhRMA Announces Dr. Richard Moscicki as New Chief Medical Officer and Executive Vice President
PhRMA today announced Richard A. Moscicki, M.D. will join the organization as chief medical officer and executive vice president.

Journal Watch

Journal Watch

   Vaccines and Global Health: The Week in Review continues its weekly scanning of key peer-reviewed journals to identify and cite articles, commentary and editorials, books reviews and other content supporting our focus on vaccine ethics and policy. Journal Watch is not intended to be exhaustive, but indicative of themes and issues the Center is actively tracking. We selectively provide full text of some editorial and comment articles that are specifically relevant to our work. Successful access to some of the links provided may require subscription or other access arrangement unique to the publisher.

If you would like to suggest other journal titles to include in this service, please contact David Curry at: david.r.curry@centerforvaccineethicsandpolicy.org

American Journal of Preventive Medicine – September 2017 Volume 53, Issue 3, p275-404, e79-e122

American Journal of Preventive Medicine
September 2017 Volume 53, Issue 3, p275-404, e79-e122
http://www.ajpmonline.org/current

Research Articles
Feasibility of Text Message Influenza Vaccine Safety Monitoring During Pregnancy
Melissa S. Stockwell, Maria Cano, Kathleen Jakob, Karen R. Broder, Cynthia Gyamfi-Bannerman, Paula M. Castaño, Paige Lewis, Angela Barrett, Oidda I. Museru, Ormarys Castellanos, Philip S. LaRussa
p282–289
Published online: May 8, 2017

Impact of Provider Recommendation on Tdap Vaccination of Adolescents Aged 13–17 Years
Peng-jun Lu, David Yankey, Jenny Jeyarajah, Alissa O’Halloran, Sarah A. Meyer, Laurie D. Elam-Evans, Sarah Reagan-Steiner
p373–384
Published online: May 8, 2017

Topics in Education
Vaccine Education of Medical Students: A Nationwide Cross-sectional Survey
Solen Kernéis, Caroline Jacquet, Aurélie Bannay, Thierry May, Odile Launay, Pierre Verger, Céline Pulcini on behalf of the EDUVAC Study Group
e97–e104
Published online: February 22, 2017

Zika and Reproductive Rights in Brazil: Challenge to the Right to Health

American Journal of Public Health
September 2017  107(9)
http://ajph.aphapublications.org/toc/ajph/current

ZIKA
Zika and Reproductive Rights in Brazil: Challenge to the Right to Health
Pablo K. Valente
107(9), pp. 1376–1380
Abstract
The Zika virus epidemic rapidly spread across Brazil and Latin America, gaining international attention because of the causal relationship between Zika and birth defects. The high number of cases in Brazil has been attributed to a failure of the state to contain the epidemic and protect the affected people, especially women. Therefore, the public health crisis created by Zika exposed a stark conflict between Brazil’s constitutional right to health and the long-standing violation of reproductive rights in the country.
Although health is considered to be a right of all in Brazil, women struggle with barriers to reproductive services and lack of access to safe and legal abortions. In response to the epidemic, women’s rights advocates have filed a lawsuit with Brazil’s supreme court that requires the decriminalization of abortion upon the diagnosis of Zika virus.
However, the selective decriminalization of abortion may lead to negative social consequences and further stigmatization of people with disabilities. A solution to the reproductive health crisis in Brazil must reconcile women’s right to choose and the rights of people with disabilities.

Per Diems in Polio Eradication: Perspectives From Community Health Workers and Officials

American Journal of Public Health
September 2017  107(9)
http://ajph.aphapublications.org/toc/ajph/current

POLIO
Per Diems in Polio Eradication: Perspectives From Community Health Workers and Officials
Svea Closser, Anat Rosenthal, Judith Justice, Kenneth Maes, Marium Sultan, Sarah Banerji, Hailom Banteyerga Amaha, Ranjani Gopinath, Patricia Omidian and Laetitia Nyirazinyoye
107(9), pp. 1470–1476
Abstract
Nearly all global health initiatives give per diems to community health workers (CHWs) in poor countries for short-term work on disease-specific programs. We interviewed CHWs, supervisors, and high-level officials (n = 95) in 6 study sites across sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia in early 2012 about the per diems given to them by the Global Polio Eradication Initiative. These per diems for CHWs ranged from $1.50 to $2.40 per day.
International officials defended per diems for CHWs with an array of arguments, primarily that they were necessary to defray the expenses that workers incurred during campaigns. But high-level ministry of health officials in many countries were concerned that even small per diems were unsustainable. By contrast, CHWs saw per diems as a wage; the very small size of this wage led many to describe per diems as unjust.
Per diem polio work existed in the larger context of limited and mostly exploitative options for female labor. Taking the perspectives of CHWs seriously would shift the international conversation about per diems toward questions of labor rights and justice in global health pay structures.

Perceptions of human papillomavirus vaccination of adolescent schoolgirls in western Uganda and their implications for acceptability of HPV vaccination: a qualitative study

BMC Research Notes
http://www.biomedcentral.com/bmcresnotes/content
(Accessed 2 September 2017)

Research article
Perceptions of human papillomavirus vaccination of adolescent schoolgirls in western Uganda and their implications for acceptability of HPV vaccination: a qualitative study
Human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination has been perceived in diverse ways some of which encourage its uptake while others could potentially deter its acceptability. This study explored community member’s perce…
Andrew Kampikaho Turiho, Elialilia Sarikieli Okello, Wilson Winstons Muhwezi and Anne Ruhweza Katahoire
BMC Research Notes 2017 10:431
Published on: 30 August 2017

Bulletin of the World Health Organization – Volume 95, Number 9, September 2017, 609-664

Bulletin of the World Health Organization
Volume 95, Number 9, September 2017, 609-664
http://www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/95/9/en/

EDITORIALS
Syphilis screening and treatment: integration with HIV services
Melanie M Taylor, Mary Kamb, Dadong Wu & Sarah Hawkes
http://dx.doi.org/10.2471/BLT.17.200923

Addressing vulnerability of pregnant refugees
Mary Malebranche, Kara Nerenberg, Amy Metcalfe & Gabriel E Fabreau
http://dx.doi.org/10.2471/BLT.17.193664

RESEARCH
Pneumococcal conjugate vaccines and hospitalization of children for pneumonia: a time-series analysis, South Africa, 2006–2014
Alane Izu, Fatima Solomon, Susan A Nzenze, Azwifarwi Mudau, Elizabeth Zell, Katherine L O’Brien, Cynthia G Whitney, Jennifer Verani, Michelle Groome & Shabir A Madhi
http://dx.doi.org/10.2471/BLT.16.187849

Estimated economic impact of vaccinations in 73 low- and middle-income countries, 2001–2020
Sachiko Ozawa, Samantha Clark, Allison Portnoy, Simrun Grewal, Meghan L Stack, Anushua Sinha, Andrew Mirelman, Heather Franklin, Ingrid K Friberg, Yvonne Tam, Neff Walker, Andrew Clark, Matthew Ferrari, Chutima Suraratdecha, Steven Sweet, Sue J Goldie, Tini Garske, Michelle Li, Peter M Hansen, Hope L Johnson & Damian Walker
http://dx.doi.org/10.2471/BLT.16.178475
Abstract [HTML]
Objective
To estimate the economic impact likely to be achieved by efforts to vaccinate against 10 vaccine-preventable diseases between 2001 and 2020 in 73 low- and middle-income countries largely supported by Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance.
Methods
We used health impact models to estimate the economic impact of achieving forecasted coverages for vaccination against Haemophilus influenzae type b, hepatitis B, human papillomavirus, Japanese encephalitis, measles, Neisseria meningitidis serogroup A, rotavirus, rubella, Streptococcus pneumoniae and yellow fever. In comparison with no vaccination, we modelled the costs – expressed in 2010 United States dollars (US$) – of averted treatment, transportation costs, productivity losses of caregivers and productivity losses due to disability and death. We used the value-of-a-life-year method to estimate the broader economic and social value of living longer, in better health, as a result of immunization.
Findings
We estimated that, in the 73 countries, vaccinations given between 2001 and 2020 will avert over 20 million deaths and save US$ 350 billion in cost of illness. The deaths and disability prevented by vaccinations given during the two decades will result in estimated lifelong productivity gains totalling US$ 330 billion and US$ 9 billion, respectively. Over the lifetimes of the vaccinated cohorts, the same vaccinations will save an estimated US$ 5 billion in treatment costs. The broader economic and social value of these vaccinations is estimated at US$ 820 billion.
Conclusion
By preventing significant costs and potentially increasing economic productivity among some of the world’s poorest countries, the impact of immunization goes well beyond health

Characterization of group B coxsackieviruses isolated from non-polio acute flaccid paralysis patients in Pakistan: vital assessment before polio eradication

Epidemiology and Infection
Volume 145 – Issue 12 – September 2017
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/epidemiology-and-infection/latest-issue

Acute Flaccid Paralysis
Original Papers
Characterization of group B coxsackieviruses isolated from non-polio acute flaccid paralysis patients in Pakistan: vital assessment before polio eradication
ANGEZ, S. SHAUKAT, R. ZAHRA, M. M. ALAM, S. SHARIF, A. KHURSHID, Y. ARSHAD, M. SULEMAN, G. MUJTABA, S. S. Z. ZAIDI
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0950268817001522
Published online: 25 July 2017, pp. 2473-2481

A realist synthesis of cross-border patient movement from low and middle income countries to similar or higher income countries

Globalization and Health
http://www.globalizationandhealth.com/
[Accessed 2 September 2017]

Review
A realist synthesis of cross-border patient movement from low and middle income countries to similar or higher income countries
Jo Durham and Sarah J. Blondell
Published on: 29 August 2017
Abstract
Patient travel across borders to access healthcare is becoming increasingly common and widespread. Patients moving from high income to middle income countries for healthcare is well documented, with patients seeking treatments that are cheaper or more readily available than at home. Less well understood is when patients move from one low income country to another or from a low income country to a higher income country. In this paper, a realist review was undertaken to explore why, in what contexts and how patients from lower income countries travel to countries with the same, or more advanced, economies for planned healthcare. Based on an initial scoping of the literature and discussions with key informants, we generated an initial theory and set of propositions about why, how, who and in what contexts people across international borders for planned healthcare. We then systematically located and synthesized (1) peer-reviewed studies from the Scopus, Emblaze, Web of Science and Econlit databases; (2) non-indexed reports using key informants and Google; and (3) papers from the reference lists of included documents, to glean supportive or contradictory evidence for our initial propositions. As we reviewed the literature and extracted our data, we drew on the work of Pierre Bourdieu to understand the interplay between material and non-material capital and cognitive processes in decisions to cross borders for healthcare. Patient travel was largely undertaken due to a lack of services in the home country and/or unacceptability of local services, with decisions on when, and where, to travel, usually made within the patient’s social networks. They were able to travel via use of multiple resources, including social networks, economic and cultural capital, and habitus. Those patients with greater volumes of the aforementioned factors had greater healthcare options; however, even those with limited resources engaged in patient travel. Patient movement challenges traditional ways of thinking about public health and the notion of health systems contained within the nation state. Further research is needed to better understand the effects of patient travel, and how to harness the benefits of patient travel without exacerbating existing health inequalities.

Knowledge sharing in global health research – the impact, uptake and cost of open access to scholarly literature

Health Research Policy and Systems
http://www.health-policy-systems.com/content
[Accessed 2 September 2017]

Research
Knowledge sharing in global health research – the impact, uptake and cost of open access to scholarly literature
In 1982, the Annals of Virology published a paper showing how Liberia has a highly endemic potential of Ebola warning health authorities of the risk for potential outbreaks; this journal is only available by subs…
Elise Smith, Stefanie Haustein, Philippe Mongeon, Fei Shu, Valéry Ridde and Vincent Larivière
Health Research Policy and Systems 2017 15:73
Published on: 29 August 2017

International Journal of Community Medicine and Public Health – Vol 4, No 9 (2017) September 2017

International Journal of Community Medicine and Public Health
Vol 4, No 9 (2017)  September 2017
http://www.ijcmph.com/index.php/ijcmph/issue/view/26

Reviews
Models to predict H1N1 outbreaks: a literature review
Anirudh V. Mutalik
DOI: 10.18203/2394-6040.ijcmph201

Assessment of knowledge, attitude and perception among mothers towards immunization in a tertiary care teaching hospital
Sarfaraz Md., Athira A., Lakshmi Mani Deepa Thotamsetty, Sree Anoohya Ravilla, Naresh Nadikudi, H. Doddayya
Abstract
Background: The knowledge, attitude and perception (KAP) of parents is an important factor for better immunization coverage. Previous studies showed misconceptions on parent’s knowledge towards childhood immunization. This study aimed at promoting the childhood immunization by providing information and knowledge to mothers regarding immunization.
Methods: A prospective interventional study was conducted on 103 mothers for a period of six months in a tertiary care teaching hospital, Karnataka. The study was divided into Pre-intervention and post-intervention phases and was performed using a KAP questionnaire.
Results: 103 mothers were enrolled in the study, of which 77 (74.75%) mothers were uneducated which was the main reason for lack of knowledge on immunization. Most of the mothers in pre-intervention phase got score in the range of 2-4 and in post-intervention phase they got score in the range of 10-12. A significant difference was observed in the Pre and Post-intervention scores which indicated that level of knowledge among mothers was improved after counseling session. Chi-square test was used to analyse the pre and post- intervention scores and was found to be significant (p<0.01). Out of 103 mothers who had attended counseling session on immunization 80 (77.66%) children were immunized, 23 (22.66%) were partially immunized and no one was unimmunized.
Conclusions: It was therefore suggested that proper health education and health promotion interventions be taken as measures to improve knowledge, attitude and perception of mothers towards immunization as a disease prevention tool.

Too young to be vaccinated: hospitalizations caused by varicella among children in the first year of life

 International Journal of Infectious Diseases
September 2017 Volume 62, p1-126
http://www.ijidonline.com/issue/S1201-9712(17)X0008-8

Original Reports
Too young to be vaccinated: hospitalizations caused by varicella among children in the first year of life
Ewelina Gowin, Jacek Wysocki, Michał Michalak, Danuta Januszkiewicz-Lewandowska
p52–55
Published online: July 19, 2017

Paper: Vaccine testing for emerging infections: the case for individual randomisation

Journal of Medical Ethics
September 2017 – Volume 43 – 9
http://jme.bmj.com/content/current

Research ethics
Paper: Vaccine testing for emerging infections: the case for individual randomisation
Nir Eyal, Marc Lipsitch
Abstract
During the 2014–2015 Ebola outbreak in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, many opposed the use of individually randomised controlled trials to test candidate Ebola vaccines. For a raging fatal disease, they explained, it is unethical to relegate some study participants to control arms. In Zika and future emerging infections, similar opposition may hinder urgent vaccine research, so it is best to address these questions now. This article lays out the ethical case for individually randomised control in testing vaccines against many emerging infections, including lethal infections in low-income countries, even when at no point in the trial do the controls receive the countermeasures being tested. When individual randomisation is feasible—and it often will be—it tends to save more lives than alternative designs would. And for emerging infections, individual randomisation also tends as such to improve care, access to the experimental vaccine and prospects for all participants relative to their opportunities absent the trial, and no less than alternative designs would. That obtains even under placebo control and without equipoise—requiring which would undermine individual randomisation and the alternative designs that opponents proffered. Our arguments expound four often-neglected factors: benefits to non-participants, benefits to participants once a trial is over including post-trial access to the study intervention, participants’ prospects before randomisation to arms and the near-inevitable disparity between arms in any randomised controlled trial.

Journal of the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society (JPIDS) – Volume 6, Issue 3, 1 September 2017

Journal of the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society (JPIDS)
Volume 6, Issue 3, 1 September 2017,
https://academic.oup.com/jpids/issue

ORIGINAL ARTICLES
The Effect of 13-Valent Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine on the Serotype Distribution and Antibiotic Resistance Profiles in Children With Invasive Pneumococcal Disease
Claudia L Gaviria-Agudelo; Alejandro Jordan-Villegas; Carla Garcia; George H McCracken, Jr.
Journal of the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society, Volume 6, Issue 3, 1 September 2017, Pages 253–259, https://doi.org/10.1093/jpids/piw005

LITERATURE REVIEW
Defining Pediatric Diarrhea in Low-Resource Settings
Gillian A Levine; Judd L Walson; Hannah E Atlas; Laura M Lamberti; Patricia B Pavlinac
Journal of the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society, Volume 6, Issue 3, 1 September 2017, Pages 289–293, https://doi.org/10.1093/jpids/pix024

Global, regional, and national disease burden estimates of acute lower respiratory infections due to respiratory syncytial virus in young children in 2015: a systematic review and modelling study

The Lancet
Sep 02, 2017 Volume 390 Number 10098 p913-1004
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/issue/current

Articles
Global, regional, and national disease burden estimates of acute lower respiratory infections due to respiratory syncytial virus in young children in 2015: a systematic review and modelling study
Ting Shi, David A McAllister, Katherine L O’Brien, Eric A F Simoes, Shabir A Madhi, Bradford D Gessner, Fernando P Polack, Evelyn Balsells, Sozinho Acacio, Claudia Aguayo, Issifou Alassani, Asad Ali, Martin Antonio, Shally Awasthi, Juliet O Awori, Eduardo Azziz-Baumgartner, Henry C Baggett, Vicky L Baillie, Angel Balmaseda, Alfredo Barahona, Sudha Basnet, Quique Bassat, Wilma Basualdo, Godfrey Bigogo, Louis Bont, Robert F Breiman, W Abdullah Brooks, Shobha Broor, o, Rodrigo A Fasce, Daniel R Feikin, Luzhao Feng, Angela Gentile, Aubree Gordon, Doli Goswami, Sophie Goyet, Michelle Groome, Natasha Halasa, Siddhivinayak Hive, Nusrat Homaira, Stephen R C Howie, Jorge Jara, Imane Jroundi, Cissy B Kartasasmita, Najwa Khuri-Bulos, Karen L Kotloff, Anand Krishnan, Romina Libster, Olga Lopez, Marilla G Lucero, Florencia Lucion, Socorro P Lupisan, Debora N Marcone, John P McCracken, Mario Mejia, Jennifer C Moisi, Joel M Montgomery, David P Moore, Cinta Moraleda, Jocelyn Moyes, Patrick Munywoki, Kuswandewi Mutyara, Mark P Nicol, D James Nokes, Pagbajabyn Nymadawa, Maria Tereza da Costa Oliveira, Histoshi Oshitani, Nitin Pandey, Gláucia Paranhos-Baccalà, Lia N Phillips, Valentina Sanchez Picot, Mustafizur Rahman, Mala Rakoto-Andrianarivelo, Zeba A Rasmussen, Barbara A Rath, Annick Robinson, Candice Romero, Graciela Russomando, Vahid Salimi, Pongpun Sawatwong, Nienke Scheltema, Brunhilde Schweiger, J Anthony G Scott, Phil Seidenberg, Kunling Shen, Rosalyn Singleton, Viviana Sotomayor, Tor A Strand, Agustinus Sutanto, Mariam Sylla, Milagritos D Tapia, Somsak Thamthitiwat, Elizabeth D Thomas, Rafal Tokarz, Claudia Turner, Marietjie Venter, Sunthareeya Waicharoen, Jianwei Wang, Wanitda Watthanaworawit, Lay-Myint Yoshida, Hongjie Yu, Heather J Zar, Harry Campbell, Harish Nair for RSV Global Epidemiology NetworkNigel Bruce, Dana Bruden, Philippe Buchy, Stuart Campbell, Phyllis Carosone-Link, Mandeep Chadha, James Chipeta, Monidarin Chou, Wilfrido Clara, Cheryl Cohen, Elizabeth de Cuellar, Duc-Anh Dang, Budragchaagiin Dash-yandag, Maria Deloria-Knoll, Mukesh Dherani, Tekchheng Eap, Bernard E Ebruke, Marcela Echavarria, Carla Cecília de Freitas Lázaro Emediat
946
Open Access

Lancet Global Health – Sep 2017 Volume 5 Number 9 e838-e947

Lancet Global Health
Sep 2017 Volume 5 Number 9 e838-e947
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/langlo/issue/current

Articles
Financing transformative health systems towards achievement of the health Sustainable Development Goals: a model for projected resource needs in 67 low-income and middle-income countries
Karin Stenberg, Odd Hanssen, Tessa Tan-Torres Edejer, Melanie Bertram, Callum Brindley, Andreia Meshreky, James E Rosen, John Stover, Paul Verboom, Rachel Sanders, Agnès Soucat
e875

The global burden of tuberculosis mortality in children: a mathematical modelling study
Peter J Dodd, Courtney M Yuen, Charalambos Sismanidis, James A Seddon, Helen E Jenkins
e898

The challenges of cholera at the 2017 Hajj pilgrimage

Lancet Infectious Diseases
Sep 2017 Volume 17 Number 9 p883-1002  e280-e305
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/laninf/issue/current

Comment
The challenges of cholera at the 2017 Hajj pilgrimage
Alimuddin Zumla, Brian McCloskey, Tina Endericks, Esam I Azhar, Eskild Petersen
Published: 10 August 2017
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1473-3099(17)30454-1
In September, 2017, up to 2 million pilgrims from all continents will arrive in Saudi Arabia for the annual Hajj pilgrimage.1 Living and worshipping together in crowded conditions will expose the pilgrims and the local Saudi Arabian community to a range of imported and local infections.1 Over the past 5 years the Hajj has focused attention on new and re-emerging infectious diseases with epidemic potential such as the Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV), Zika virus, and pan-antibiotic-resistant bacteria—global health security threats that are ongoing and under active surveillance.2 This year the explosive outbreak of cholera in Yemen,3 from where many pilgrims originate, represents a serious risk to all pilgrims during the Hajj, and has the potential for global spread after the pilgrims return to their countries of origin. As of July 21, 2017, the cholera epidemic in Yemen has affected an estimated 356 600 people and caused 1800 deaths, with 5000 new active cases reported every day.4

Cholera at the Hajj is not new.5 During the 1821 Hajj, 20,000 pilgrims died as a result of the global cholera epidemic, which started in India in 1817 and spread across the world. Another cholera epidemic during the 1865 Hajj killed 15,000 of 90,000 pilgrims, and spread worldwide, including to the USA and Europe, with 200,000 deaths.5 Dealing with infectious disease outbreaks and outbreak prevention at the Hajj has been a public health priority for Saudi Arabia because repeated endemic outbreaks of diarrhoeal diseases have occurred as a result of various pathogens prevalent in countries from which pilgrims originate. Since the 1865 outbreak, the Saudi Arabian health authorities have been well prepared to respond to an outbreak and have not had a major cholera outbreak, largely because of improvements to infrastructures for surveillance, rapid detection, and control through the Hajj Command and Control Centre.1 They have ensured hygienic living conditions for pilgrims, and easy and free access to washing facilities, purified water, and health services.1

The latest overall cholera prevalence in Yemen has been estimated at 266 per 10,000 population.6 In 2016, 19,500 Yemenis obtained a visa for the Hajj. If the attack rate is the same in a similar number of Yemeni pilgrims planning to attend the Hajj in 2017, up to roughly 582 cases of cholera can be expected. Notably, about 80% of individuals infected with Vibrio cholerae do not show symptoms and remain undetected, but are infectious. Thus, cholera poses substantial public health challenges for the 2017 Hajj. The ongoing cholera epidemic in Yemen calls for extreme caution and requires that particular attention is given to prevention, surveillance, and control measures. Advances in the development and assessment of new cholera vaccines provide hope for better control.7 The WHO Strategic Advisory Group of Experts (SAGE) on immunisation8 concluded at their meeting in April, 2017, that there is mounting evidence over the past 3 years that high coverage with oral cholera vaccine (OCV) results in a significant reduction of cholera transmission in various settings.

Three killed whole-cell OCVs have been prequalified by WHO—Dukoral (Valneva, Stockholm, Sweden), Shanchol (Shantha Biotechnics, Hyderabad, India), and Euvichol (EuBiologics, Seoul, South Korea). All three vaccines have good safety profiles and greater than 60% effectiveness against cholera disease for at least 3 years after two doses. In 2013, WHO formally established an OCV stockpile, which consists of Shanchol and Euvichol. Thus, mandating the cholera vaccine for pilgrims from Yemen, and those countries where cholera is endemic, might be prudent and requires practical and feasible recommendations.

WHO and Saudi Arabia should jointly commission a risk assessment to review the potential benefits, risks, costs, and practicalities of cholera vaccination and come up with feasible recommendations that should be operationally, clinically, financially, and politically sustainable. These recommendations should be included in the 2017 Saudi Arabian health requirements for pilgrims.9 Furthermore, WHO guidelines on measures to prevent cholera and community awareness campaigns should be put into practice and strictly implemented. Proactive health education campaigns, implemented before, during, and after the Hajj, using leaflets and social media targeting all pilgrims and local Saudi Arabia populations, are required. These campaigns should include recommendations for basic hygienic toilet practice, including hand-washing after defecation and before handling food and eating, and health-seeking behaviour for those who develop symptoms. Meanwhile, the focus on cholera must not deter the Saudi Arabian authorities from remaining vigilant with regard to other epidemic-prone gastrointestinal and respiratory tract pathogens.2
   We declare no competing interests. All authors have links with the Global Centre for Mass Gatherings Medicine.
   References at title link.

Lancet Infectious Diseases – Sep 2017 Volume 17 Number 9 p883-1002 e280-e305

Lancet Infectious Diseases
Sep 2017 Volume 17 Number 9 p883-1002  e280-e305
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/laninf/issue/current

Articles
Estimates of global, regional, and national morbidity, mortality, and aetiologies of diarrhoeal diseases: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2015
GBD Diarrhoeal Diseases Collaborators
909
Open Access

Impact of the introduction of pneumococcal conjugate vaccination on pneumonia in The Gambia: population-based surveillance and case-control studies
Grant A Mackenzie, Philip C Hill, Shah M Sahito, David J Jeffries, Ilias Hossain, Christian Bottomley, Uchendu Uchendu, David Ameh, Malick Ndiaye, Chidebereh D Osuorah, Oyedeji Adeyemi, Jayani Pathirana, Yekini Olatunji, Bade Abatan, Ebirim Ahameefula, Bilquees S Muhammad, Augustin E Fombah, Debasish Saha, Roslyn Mackenzie, Ian Plumb, Aliu Akano, Bernard Ebruke, Readon C Ideh, Bankole Kuti, Peter Githua, Emmanuel Olutunde, Ogochukwu Ofordile, Edward Green, Effua Usuf, Henry Badji, Usman N A Ikumapayi, Ahmad Manjang, Rasheed Salaudeen, E David Nsekpong, Sheikh Jarju, Martin Antonio, Sana Sambou, Lamin Ceesay, Yamundow Lowe-Jallow, Dawda Sowe, Momodou Jasseh, Kim Mulholland, Maria Knoll, Orin S Levine, Stephen R Howie, Richard A Adegbola, Brian M Greenwood, Tumani Corrah
965
Open Access

An update of the global burden of pertussis in children younger than 5 years: a modelling study
Karene Hoi Ting Yeung, Philippe Duclos, E Anthony S Nelson, Raymond Christiaan W Hutubessy
974

Year-round influenza immunisation during pregnancy in Nepal: a phase 4, randomised, placebo-controlled trial
Mark C Steinhoff, Joanne Katz, Janet A Englund, Subarna K Khatry, Laxman Shrestha, Jane Kuypers, Laveta Stewart, Luke C Mullany, Helen Y Chu, Steven C LeClerq, Naoko Kozuki, Monica McNeal, Adriana M Reedy, James M Tielsch
981

Review
Insights from clinical research completed during the west Africa Ebola virus disease epidemic
Amanda Rojek, Peter Horby, Jake Dunning
e280

Comparative effectiveness of high-dose versus standard-dose influenza vaccination on numbers of US nursing home residents admitted to hospital: a cluster-randomised trial

Lancet Respiratory Medicine
Sep 2017 Volume 5 Number 9 p667-760  e29
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanres/issue/current

Articles
Comparative effectiveness of high-dose versus standard-dose influenza vaccination on numbers of US nursing home residents admitted to hospital: a cluster-randomised trial
Stefan Gravenstein, H Edward Davidson, Monica Taljaard, Jessica Ogarek, Pedro Gozalo, Lisa Han, Vincent Mor

Evaluating a LARC Expansion Program in 14 Sub-Saharan African Countries: A Service Delivery Model for Meeting FP2020 Goals

Maternal and Child Health Journal
Volume 21, Issue 9, September 2017
https://link.springer.com/journal/10995/21/8/page/1
Special Issue on Long Acting Reversible Contraception (LARC) in the Global Context

OriginalPaper
Evaluating a LARC Expansion Program in 14 Sub-Saharan African Countries: A Service Delivery Model for Meeting FP2020 Goals
Thoai D. Ngo, Olivia Nuccio, Shreya K. Pereira

Identification of essential genes for cancer immunotherapy

Nature 
Volume 548 Number 7669 pp499-618   31 August 2017
http://www.nature.com/nature/current_issue.html

Articles
Identification of essential genes for cancer immunotherapy
Shashank J. Patel, Neville E. Sanjana, Rigel J. Kishton, Arash Eidizadeh, Suman K. Vodnala+ et al.
The authors describe a two-cell-type CRISPR screen to identify tumour-intrinsic genes that regulate the sensitivity of cancer cells to effector T cell function.

Pediatrics – September 2017, VOLUME 140 / ISSUE 3

Pediatrics
September 2017, VOLUME 140 / ISSUE 3
http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/140/3?current-issue=y

Articles
Epidemiology of Acute Otitis Media in the Postpneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine Era
Ravinder Kaur, Matthew Morris, Michael E. Pichichero
Pediatrics Sep 2017, 140 (3) e20170181; DOI: 10.1542/peds.2017-0181
In this 10-year prospective study, we capture the epidemiology and risk factors of AOM and the otitis-prone condition in the PCV era.

Vaccine Education During Pregnancy and Timeliness of Infant Immunization
Priya Veerasingam, Cameron C. Grant, Carol Chelimo, Kathryn Philipson, Catherine A. Gilchrist, Sarah Berry, Polly Atatoa Carr, Carlos A. Camargo, Susan Morton
Pediatrics Sep 2017, 140 (3) e20163727; DOI: 10.1542/peds.2016-3727
We identify pregnant women’s sources of immunization information and determine the associations of receiving encouraging or discouraging information with their infants’ immunization timeliness.

Vaccine-Preventable Diseases Requiring Hospitalization
Gregory Williamson, Bilaal Ahmed, Parvathi S. Kumar, Barbara E. Ostrov, Jessica E. Ericson
Pediatrics Sep 2017, 140 (3) e20170298; DOI: 10.1542/peds.2017-0298
Through a retrospective chart review, this study determined the incidence of VPDs in central-Pennsylvania Amish, Mennonite, and non-Plain children requiring hospitalization.
Open Access

Commentaries
Vaccines and Outpatient Antibiotic Stewardship
Adam L. Hersh, Katherine E. Fleming-Dutra
Pediatrics Sep 2017, 140 (3) e20171695; DOI: 10.1542/peds.2017-1695

Adverse Events Following Immunization: Will It Happen Again?
Sean T. O’Leary, Yvonne A. Maldonado
Pediatrics Sep 2017, 140 (3) e20171760; DOI: 10.1542/peds.2017-1760

Review Articles
Open Access
Risk of Recurrence of Adverse Events Following Immunization: A Systematic Review
Joseline Guetsop Zafack, Gaston De Serres, Marilou Kiely, Marie-Claude Gariépy, Isabelle Rouleau, Karina Anne-Marie Top, for the Canadian Immunization Research Network
Pediatrics Sep 2017, 140 (3) e20163707; DOI: 10.1542/peds.2016-3707
This systematic review presents the risk of recurrence of AEFIs in patients who receive subsequent doses of vaccine.

Special Article
Methodological and Ethical Issues in Pediatric Medication Safety Research
Delesha Carpenter, Daniel Gonzalez, George Retsch-Bogart, Betsy Sleath, Benjamin Wilfond
Pediatrics Sep 2017, 140 (3) e20170195; DOI: 10.1542/peds.2017-0195
This executive summary describes current challenges to conducting pediatric medication safety research and highlights state-of-the-art methodologies to overcome these challenges.

The francophone network on neglected tropical diseases

PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
http://www.plosntds.org/
(Accessed 2 September 2017)

Policy Platform
The francophone network on neglected tropical diseases
Jean Jannin, Philippe Solano, Isadora Quick, Patrice Debre
| published 31 Aug 2017 PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0005738
[Excerpt]
Launching and organization of the network
The Réseau Francophone sur les Maladies Tropicales Négligées (RFMTN) was officially launched on 8 April 2016 in Montpellier. This network, established under the auspices of the alliance for health and life sciences (AVIESAN), promotes collaboration between French research institutions and gathers research institutions, researchers, medical doctors, NGOs (having operational projects in the field of NTDs), the pharmaceutical industry, foundations, and DEC stakeholders. Its goal is to fill gaps on NTDs thanks to a reinforced contribution of France and to focus on elimination of NTDs. The network seeks to federate French and francophone institutions and individuals working on NTDs and to strengthen relations between NTDs stakeholders. It promotes interinstitutional collaborations on translational research, training, and implementation of elimination projects and aims at raising awareness of NTDs. Finally, it also envisions bridging with other existing European and African NTD networks.
The network, based on individual membership, is also open to associations and scientific societies. It is run by a secretariat hosted by Aviesan and is supported by a scientific and strategic committee comprising the member institutions, DEC stakeholders, industry, and NGOs.
The RFMTN has decided to focus on the “elimination of NTDs,” addressing some key questions:
How do we define ad hoc and implement control activities in order to sustain the targets of the Roadmap?
In the context of very low prevalence prevailing when approaching or reaching elimination targets, what can be done to offer a new spectrum of research to scientists in order to develop adequate tools (diagnostics, treatments, vaccines, vector-control tools) adapted to this context? How can industries and national governments be convinced to stay on board and maintain their efforts? How can we avoid the “punishment of success” by convincing donors to continue providing funding when prevalence of diseases is becoming very low?…

PLoS One [Accessed 2 September 2017]

PLoS One
http://www.plosone.org/
[Accessed 2 September 2017]

Research Article
Stakeholder perceptions of communication about vaccination in two regions of Cameroon: A qualitative case study
Heather Ames, Diangha Mabel Njang, Claire Glenton, Atle Fretheim, Jessica Kaufman, Sophie Hill, Afiong Oku, Julie Cliff, Yuri Cartier, Xavier Bosch-Capblanch, Gabriel Rada, Artur Manuel Muloliwa, Angela Oyo-Ita, Awah Paschal Kum, Simon Lewin
Research Article | published 31 Aug 2017 PLOS ONE
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0183721

Equalizing access to pandemic influenza vaccines through optimal allocation to public health distribution points
Hsin-Chan Huang, Bismark Singh, David P. Morton, Gregory P. Johnson, Bruce Clements, Lauren Ancel Meyers
Research Article | published 30 Aug 2017 PLOS ONE
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0182720

Influence, integrity, and the FDA: An ethical framework

Science         
01 September 2017  Vol 357, Issue 6354
http://www.sciencemag.org/current.dtl

Policy Forum
Influence, integrity, and the FDA: An ethical framework
By Spencer Phillips Hey, I. Glenn Cohen, Eli Y. Adashi, Aaron S. Kesselheim
Science01 Sep 2017 : 876-877 Restricted Access
Summary
Among the core missions of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) are protecting public health by assuring the safety and efficacy of drugs, biologics, and medical devices and advancing public health by promoting scientific research and medical innovation (1). According to its mandate, the decisions made by the FDA in fulfilling these missions should be guided by scientific considerations, not economic or political ones. However, several recent, high-profile episodes have highlighted the fact that the FDA is buffeted by many external influences (2, 3). Such controversies require us to distinguish between legitimate influences that would improve the FDA or enhance its regulatory mission, illegitimate influences that seek to corrupt or undermine the agency, and influences that may be legitimate but nevertheless harm public health or patient outcomes. We present a decision framework to assist regulators, policy-makers, judges, physicians, and the public in evaluating the legitimacy and value of external influences on the FDA.

Science Translational Medicine – 30 August 2017

Science Translational Medicine
30 August 2017  Vol 9, Issue 405
http://stm.sciencemag.org/

Focus
Subcutaneous drug delivery: An evolving enterprise
By Graham B. Jones, David S. Collins, Michael W. Harrison, Nagarajan R. Thyagarajapuram, Justin M. Wright
Science Translational Medicine30 Aug 2017 Restricted Access
Recent advances in subcutaneous drug delivery and device design are transforming the biopharmaceutical sector and improving patient care.

Research Articles
Increased adaptive immune responses and proper feedback regulation protect against clinical dengue
By Etienne Simon-Lorière, Veasna Duong, Ahmed Tawfik, Sivlin Ung, Sowath Ly, Isabelle Casadémont, Matthieu Prot, Noémie Courtejoie, Kevin Bleakley, Philippe Buchy, Arnaud Tarantola, Philippe Dussart, Tineke Cantaert, Anavaj Sakuntabhai
Science Translational Medicine30 Aug 2017 Full Access
Increased activation of adaptive immunity and proper feedback mechanisms can eliminate dengue viral infection without clinical symptoms.

Utilization and impact of European immunization week to increase measles, mumps, rubella vaccine uptake in Austria in 2016

Vaccine
Volume 35, Issue 37, Pages 4825-5080 (5 September 2017)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X/35/37?sdc=1

Short Communications
Utilization and impact of European immunization week to increase measles, mumps, rubella vaccine uptake in Austria in 2016
Pages 4836-4839
Kreidl, Catharina de Kat, EIW Tyrol-Study Group
Abstract
This paper describes engagement in European Immunization Week (EIW) in Tyrol, Austria in April 2016 and an assessment of its possible impact on demand for measles, mumps, rubella vaccination (MMR).
It further describes the output of a knowledge, attitudes and practice (KAP) survey conducted during EIW, showing that 93% (188/202) of respondents were in favor of vaccination in general and 90% (192/214) perceived MMR vaccination to be important. MMR vaccination was perceived as important by more participants than other vaccinations.
The number of MMR doses administered by public health services in the province of Tyrol during EIW was greater than in the previous week, and EIW activities thus potentially resulted in increased MMR vaccine uptake in Tyrol during the observed period. The annual EIW campaign provides important opportunities to address vaccine hesitancy by raising awareness about immunization, to identify barriers to immunization and test possible solutions.

The benefit of the doubt or doubts over benefits? A systematic literature review of perceived risks of vaccines in European populations

Vaccine
Volume 35, Issue 37, Pages 4825-5080 (5 September 2017)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X/35/37?sdc=1

Reviews
The benefit of the doubt or doubts over benefits? A systematic literature review of perceived risks of vaccines in European populations
Review Article
Pages 4840-4850
Emilie Karafillakis, Heidi J. Larson, On behalf of the ADVANCE consortium
Abstract
Objectives
The success of vaccination strategies depends in part on population perceptions of benefits and risks of vaccines and related confidence in vaccination. Better knowledge of public concerns about vaccines and what is driving them is needed to inform vaccination strategies and communications. This literature reviewer examined studies on vaccine and vaccination risk perceptions and concerns across European populations.
Methods
A systematic literature review was conducted to identify studies published between 2004 and 2014 in Europe. A descriptive analysis was performed.
Findings
A total of 145 articles were selected, most of which were conducted in the UK, the Netherlands and France and studied seasonal influenza, HPV and pandemic influenza vaccination. Across all countries and vaccines, the primary area of concern was vaccine safety, followed by perceptions of low likelihood of contracting vaccine-preventable diseases (VPDs), perceived low severity of VPDs, beliefs that vaccines do not work, and overall lack of information. Concerns were found to be vaccine-, country- and population-specific.
Conclusion
In addition to identifying concerns about vaccination in Europe, this study confirmed the notion that individuals have many safety concerns about vaccination and often believe that the risks of vaccination outweigh their benefits. More research needs to be conducted to explore the impact of different types of communication strategies, which would frame the benefits of vaccination as well as risks of not vaccinating. Strategies to better inform public perceptions of vaccines should include the provision of unbiased, comprehensive information tailored to population information needs, and delivered using multiple and new communication technologies such as social media.

Acceptability of microneedle-patch vaccines: A qualitative analysis of the opinions of parents

Vaccine
Volume 35, Issue 37, Pages 4825-5080 (5 September 2017)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X/35/37?sdc=1

Original Research Articles
Acceptability of microneedle-patch vaccines: A qualitative analysis of the opinions of parents
Pages 4896-4904
Marshall, A. Fleming, A.C. Moore, L.J. Sahm
Abstract
Introduction
Vaccines incorporated into microneedle-based patch platforms offer advantages over conventional hypodermic injections. However, the success and clinical utility of these platforms will depend on its acceptance among stakeholders. Minimal focus has been placed on determining parents’ acceptability of microneedle-patch vaccines intended for paediatric use. This qualitative study probes the perceived acceptability of microneedle technology for paediatric vaccination in a parent population.
Research design and methodology
Focus groups (n=6) were convened through purposive sampling of Cork city primary schools. Discussions were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, anonymised, independently verified and analysed by thematic analysis, with constant comparison method applied throughout.
Results
The opinions of 32 parents were included. All participants declared that their children were fully vaccinated. Five core themes were identified and defined as: (i) concern, (ii) suitability for paediatric use, (iii) potential for parental administration, (iv) the role of the healthcare professional and (v) special populations. Drivers for acceptance include; concerns with current vaccines and vaccination programmes; attributes of microneedle-patch (reduced pain, bleeding, fear and increased convenience) and endorsement by a healthcare professional. Barriers to acceptance include; lack of familiarity, concerns regarding feasibility and suitability in paediatrics, allergic potential, inability to confirm delivery and potential reduction in vaccine coverage.
Conclusion
This is the first study to explore parental acceptance of microneedle-patch vaccines. Capturing the opinions of parents, the ultimate decision makers in paediatric vaccination, is crucial in the understanding of the eventual uptake of microneedle technology and therefore adds to literature currently available. This study has revealed that even “vaccine-acceptors”; parents who agree with, or do not question vaccination, will question the safety and efficacy of this novel method. Participants in this study remained tentative. However, the study has also revealed that endorsement by healthcare professionals could reduce this tentativeness, thereby identifying the role of healthcare professionals in disseminating information and providing support to parents. An increased awareness of developments in microneedle technology is needed to permit informed decision-making by parents.

Cost-benefit analyses of supplementary measles immunisation in the highly immunized population of New Zealand

Vaccine
Volume 35, Issue 37, Pages 4825-5080 (5 September 2017)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X/35/37?sdc=1

Cost-benefit analyses of supplementary measles immunisation in the highly immunized population of New Zealand
Original Research Article
Pages 4913-4922
D.T.S. Hayman, J.C. Marshall, N.P. French, T.E. Carpenter, M.G. Roberts, T. Kiedrzynski
Abstract
As endemic measles is eliminated from countries through increased immunisation, the economic benefits of enhanced immunisation programs may come into question. New Zealand has suffered from outbreaks after measles introductions from abroad and we use it as a model system to understand the benefits of catch up immunisation in highly immunised populations. We provide cost-benefit analyses for measles supplementary immunisation in New Zealand. We model outbreaks based on estimates of the basic reproduction number in the vaccinated population (Rv, the number of secondary infections in a partially immunised population), based on the number of immunologically-naïve people at district and national levels, considering both pre- and post-catch up vaccination scenarios. Our analyses suggest that measles Rv often includes or exceeds one (0.18–3.92) despite high levels of population immunity. We calculate the cost of the first 187 confirmed and probable measles cases in 2014 to be over NZ$1 million (∼US$864,200) due to earnings lost, case management and hospitalization costs. The benefit-cost ratio analyses suggest additional vaccination beyond routine childhood immunisation is economically efficient. Supplemental vaccination-related costs are required to exceed approximately US$66 to US$1877 per person, depending on different scenarios, before supplemental vaccination is economically inefficient. Thus, our analysis suggests additional immunisation beyond childhood programs to target naïve individuals is economically beneficial even when childhood immunisation rates are high.

 

Targeted human papillomavirus vaccination for young men who have sex with men in Australia yields significant population benefits and is cost-effective

Vaccine
Volume 35, Issue 37, Pages 4825-5080 (5 September 2017)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X/35/37?sdc=1

Targeted human papillomavirus vaccination for young men who have sex with men in Australia yields significant population benefits and is cost-effective
Original Research Article
Pages 4923-4929
Lei Zhang, David G. Regan, Jason J. Ong, Manoj Gambhir, Eric P.F. Chow, Huachun Zou, Matthew Law, Jane Hocking, Christopher K. Fairley
Abstract
Background
We investigated the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a targeted human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination program for young (15–26) men who have sex with men (MSM).
Methods
We developed a compartmental model to project HPV epidemic trajectories in MSM for three vaccination scenarios: a boys program, a targeted program for young MSM only and the combination of the two over 2017–2036. We assessed the gain in quality-adjusted-life-years (QALY) in 190,000 Australian MSM.
Results
A targeted program for young MSM only that achieved 20% coverage per year, without a boys program, will prevent 49,283 (31,253–71,500) cases of anogenital warts, 191 (88–319) person-years living with anal cancer through 2017–2036 but will only stablise anal cancer incidence. In contrast, a boys program will prevent 82,056 (52,100–117,164) cases of anogenital warts, 447 (204–725) person-years living with anal cancers through 2017–2036 and see major declines in anal cancer. This can reduce 90% low- and high-risk HPV in young MSM by 2024 and 2032, respectively, but will require vaccinating ≥84% of boys. Adding a targeted program for young MSM to an existing boys program would prevent an additional 14,912 (8479–21,803) anogenital wart and 91 (42–152) person-years living with anal cancer. In combination with a boys’ program, a catch-up program for young MSM will cost an additional $AUD 6788 ($4628–11,989) per QALY gained, but delaying its implementation reduced its cost-effectiveness.
Conclusions
A boys program that achieved coverage of about 84% will result in a 90% reduction in HPV. A targeted program for young MSM is cost-effective if timely implemented.

Implementation of HPV vaccination guidelines in a diverse population in Los Angeles: Results from an environmental scan of local HPV resources and needs

Vaccine
Volume 35, Issue 37, Pages 4825-5080 (5 September 2017)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X/35/37?sdc=1

Implementation of HPV vaccination guidelines in a diverse population in Los Angeles: Results from an environmental scan of local HPV resources and needs
Original Research Article
Pages 4930-4935
Lourdes Baezconde-Garbanati, Brianna A. Lienemann, Marisela Robles, Ethel Johnson, Kathleen Sanchez, Rita Singhal, Jane Steinberg, Jenny M. Jaque, Mary Ann Pentz, Stephen Gruber
Abstract
Research shows that vaccination against human papillomavirus (HPV) infection is one of the most effective methods for reducing risk for cervical cancer; it also protects against other HPV-related cancers. Controversies exist regarding HPV vaccination in several communities; which may in part explain why although rates of HPV vaccination are increasing nationwide, Los Angeles County (LAC) data show that many adolescents are still not vaccinated. These adolescents remain at high-risk for infection. Using community-based participatory principles, we conducted an environmental scan that included a literature review, the development of a community advisory board, community feedback from HPV community meetings, and interviews with stakeholders to understand attitudes toward HPV vaccination and their impact in follow through with HPV vaccines. Twenty-eight key stakeholders participated in our coalition comprised of community organizations and clinics with strong ties to the local community. This is the only coalition dedicated exclusively to improving HPV vaccine uptake in LAC. Of these, twenty-one participated in an environmental scan via qualitative interviews about HPV vaccination programs, service delivery priorities, and proposed steps to increase HPV vaccination uptake in LAC. The environmental scan revealed targets for future efforts, barriers to HPV uptake, and next steps for improving local HPV vaccination uptake rates. The environmental scan also identified local HPV vaccination interventions and resources. Although LAC has developed important efforts for vaccination, some interventions are no longer being implemented due to lack of funds; others have not been evaluated with sufficient outcome data. The risk for cervical and other HPV-related cancers could be greatly reduced in LAC if a multilevel, multicultural, and multilingual approach is taken to better understand rates of HPV vaccination uptake, particularly among racial/ethnic minorities and LGBTQ youth. Our environmental scan provides guidance on attitudes toward vaccination, and how best to address the needs of LAC families and providers.

Benevolent personification of the MoH increases compliance with an emergency polio vaccination

Vaccine
Volume 35, Issue 37, Pages 4825-5080 (5 September 2017)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X/35/37?sdc=1

Benevolent personification of the MoH increases compliance with an emergency polio vaccination
Original Research Article
Pages 5006-5010
Golan Shahar, Gal Noyman-Veksler, Shai Itamar, David Greenberg, Itamar Grotto
Abstract
Objective
Parental compliance is crucial to the success of mass vaccination campaigns targeting children. Relying on psychological/neuroscientific research concerning the role of personification (i.e., viewing the inanimate as human) in behavior, the authors examined the effect of parents’ personification of the Israeli Ministry of Health (MoH) on compliance with a publicly controversial mass vaccination campaign, which was aimed at stopping the spread of a wild poliovirus.
Methods
Participants were 555 parents of children aged 9 or younger, residing in the center/north of Israel, an area covered by Phase 2 of the campaign. T1 assessment, employed two days prior to Phase 2, tapped into demographics, attitudes towards vaccination, intent to comply, and a benevolent personification of the MoH (i.e., “The MoH is caring”) vs. a malevolent personification of the MoH (“The MoH is hysteric”). T2 assessment, transpiring four months after the end of the campaign, addressed presence and reasons for (non-)compliance.
Results
The study’s overall compliance rate was 61.8%. The principal reason for compliance was “adherence to the recommendations of the MoH” (68.49%). In a multivariate logistic regression analysis, prospective predictors of compliance were: an early intent to comply (O.R. = 2.56, p = 0.000), being male (O. R. = 1.51, p = 0.023), and a benevolent personification of the MoH (O.R. = 1.21, p = 0.019).
Conclusion
Parents who experienced the Israeli MoH as a benevolent protagonist were more likely to comply with the mass vaccination campaign. Findings highlight the role of leadership in public health campaigns during emergencies.

FDA licensure of and ACIP recommendations for vaccines

Vaccine
Volume 35, Issue 37, Pages 4825-5080 (5 September 2017)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X/35/37?sdc=1

FDA licensure of and ACIP recommendations for vaccines
Original Research Article
Pages 5027-5036
Larry K. Pickering, Walter A Orenstein, Wellington Sun, Carol J. Baker
Abstract
Many healthcare providers are not familiar with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) vaccine licensure process, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) vaccine recommendation process, and how FDA vaccine licensure and ACIP recommendations are related. Vaccines for use in the United States military and civilian populations are licensed by the FDA by several potential pathways but use of licensed vaccines in the civilian population should be based on recommendations made by the ACIP. In performing these distinct activities, FDA and ACIP function under different mandates. In this article, we discuss whether the FDA licensure pathways used to approve a vaccine impacts ACIP recommendation categories for vaccines licensed from 2006 to 2016.

Feasibility of using global system for mobile communication (GSM)-based tracking for vaccinators to improve oral poliomyelitis vaccine campaign coverage in rural Pakistan

Vaccine
Volume 35, Issue 37, Pages 4825-5080 (5 September 2017)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X/35/37?sdc=1

Feasibility of using global system for mobile communication (GSM)-based tracking for vaccinators to improve oral poliomyelitis vaccine campaign coverage in rural Pakistan
Original Research Article
Pages 5037-5042
Subhash Chandir, Vijay Kumar Dharma, Danya Arif Siddiqi, Aamir Javed Khan
Abstract
Despite multiple rounds of immunization campaigns, it has not been possible to achieve optimum immunization coverage for poliovirus in Pakistan. Supplementary activities to improve coverage of immunization, such as door-to-door campaigns are constrained by several factors including inaccurate hand-drawn maps and a lack of means to objectively monitor field teams in real time, resulting in suboptimal vaccine coverage during campaigns. Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM) – based tracking of mobile subscriber identity modules (SIMs) of vaccinators provides a low-cost solution to identify missed areas and ensure effective immunization coverage. We conducted a pilot study to investigate the feasibility of using GSM technology to track vaccinators through observing indicators including acceptability, ease of implementation, costs and scalability as well as the likelihood of ownership by District Health Officials. The real-time location of the field teams was displayed on a GSM tracking web dashboard accessible by supervisors and managers for effective monitoring of workforce attendance including ‘time in-time out’, and discerning if all target areas – specifically remote and high-risk locations – had been reached. Direct access to this information by supervisors eliminated the possibility of data fudging and inaccurate reporting by workers regarding their mobility. The tracking cost per vaccinator was USD 0.26/month. Our study shows that GSM-based tracking is potentially a cost-efficient approach, results in better monitoring and accountability, is scalable and provides the potential for improved geographic coverage of health services.