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Imperfect
Vaccines Could Reduce HIV Prevalence and AIDS Deaths
The
potential public health impact of imperfect
HIV type 1 vaccines
was examined by use of deterministic mathematical
models of virus transmission.
Imperfect
vaccines are defined as those that act
to favorably alter the typical clinical course
of disease in those immunized who acquire
infection.
The
properties examined include a lengthened incubation
period; reduced virus load, which acts to lower
infectiousness; reduced susceptibility on exposure to
infection; and an increase in risk behaviors
by those vaccinated.
Analyses
suggest that, although imperfect vaccines would
struggle to block transmission via cohort vaccination
of those entering the sexually active age
classes, they could have a substantial public
health impact, as measured by reduced
prevalence and mortality induced
by acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), provided
the case reproductive number of HIV-1 among vaccinated
individuals (R0v) was less than that
among unvaccinated individuals (R0).
This
requires that any lengthening in the incubation
period and, hence, the time period over which
an infected vaccine recipient can transmit
to susceptible sex partners, as well as any
increase in risk behaviors, are more than offset
by other effects, such as reduced susceptibility
to infection and reduced infectiousness.
Numerical
studies based on a more complex model, which
included representation of age, sex, heterogeneity
in sexual activity, variable infectiousness, and
different mixing patterns between risk groups, were
used to confirm the general insights gained from
a simple deterministic model.
Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology,
Imperial College, University of
London, St. Mary's Campus,
London, United Kingdom.
O1/31/05
Reference
R Anderson and M Hanson. Potential Public
Health Impact of Imperfect
HIV Type 1 Vaccines. Journal
of infectious Diseases 191(1): S85-S96.
February 1, 2005.
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