Population-level health and economic impacts of introducing Vaccae vaccination in China: a modelling study

Author:

Mao Jun-JieORCID,Zang XiaoORCID,Yue Wan-LuORCID,Zhai Pei-YaoORCID,Zhang QiongORCID,Li Chun-HuORCID,Zhuang XunORCID,Liu MinORCID,Qin GangORCID

Abstract

IntroductionGiven the ageing epidemic of tuberculosis (TB), China is facing an unprecedented opportunity provided by the first clinically approved next-generation TB vaccine Vaccae, which demonstrated 54.7% efficacy for preventing reactivation from latent infection in a phase III trial. We aim to assess the population-level health and economic impacts of introducing Vaccae vaccination to inform policy-makers.MethodsWe evaluated a potential national Vaccae vaccination programme in China initiated in 2024, assuming 20 years of protection, 90% coverage and US$30/dose government contract price. An age-structured compartmental model was adapted to simulate three strategies: (1) no Vaccae; (2) mass vaccination among people aged 15–74 years and (3) targeted vaccination among older adults (60 years). Cost analyses were conducted from the healthcare sector perspective, discounted at 3%.ResultsConsidering postinfection efficacy, targeted vaccination modestly reduced TB burden (~20%), preventing cumulative 8.01 (95% CI 5.82 to 11.8) million TB cases and 0.20 (0.17 to 0.26) million deaths over 2024–2050, at incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of US$4387 (2218 to 10 085) per disability adjusted life year averted. The implementation would require a total budget of US$22.5 (17.6 to 43.4) billion. In contrast, mass vaccination had a larger bigger impact on the TB epidemic, but the overall costs remained high. Although both preinfection and postinfection vaccine efficacy type might have a maximum impact (>40% incidence rate reduction in 2050), it is important that the vaccine price does not exceed US$5/dose.ConclusionVaccae represents a robust and cost-effective choice for TB epidemic control in China. This study may facilitate the practice of evidence-based strategy plans for TB vaccination and reimbursement decision making.

Funder

Science and Technology Support Program of Jiangsu Province

Ministry of Science and Technology of the People's Republic of China

Jiangsu Provincial Department of Education

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy

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