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A decision analysis of pertussis control measures April 1st, 2009 Garrett R. Beeler Asay, Ph.D. Immunization Services Division Collaborative work w/ Division of Bacterial Diseases Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Background • Bordetella pertussis – “whooping cough” • WHO statistics – 152,535 cases (2007) • US National Statistics – 25,827(2004) – 25,626 (2005) – 15,632 (2006) 5/7/2017 McNabb et al. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Summary of notifiable diseases – United States, 2006. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2008; 55:53. 2 Adapted from McNabb et al. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Summary of notifiable diseases – United States, 2006. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2008; 55:53. 5/7/2017 3 5/7/2017 Adapted from McNabb et al. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Summary of notifiable diseases – United States, 2006. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2008; 55:53. 4 Pertussis Diagnosis & Transmission – whoop not always present, cold-like symptoms – not suspected until prolonged cough – cases can build up large numbers of contacts (80% attack rate in households1) 1Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Epidemiology and Prevention of Vaccine-Preventable Diseases. Atkinson W, Hamborsky J, McIntyre L, Wolfe S, eds. 10th ed. Washinton DC: Public Health Foundation, 2007. Pertussis Control Measures • Treat case • Trace close contacts, recommend chemoprophylaxis & vaccinate if eligible • Test, monitor for signs of cough Source: Adapted from Committee on Infectious Diseases, Red Book: 2006 Report of the Committee on Infectious Diseases, 27th Edition, 2006 and Guidelines for the Control of Pertussis Outbreaks, NIP, CDC, 2000. Outbreak in Douglas County, NE Outbreak Characteristics • School based • Suburb of Omaha, Nebraska • Total population 1000 – Students, staff, parents, siblings • 36 infants1 (< 1 year old) • Vaccine uptake high (~95%) • 24 pertussis cases 1Thomas, Cynthia, CDC working paper (2009) One School Based Outbreak (24 Pertussis Cases) Activity Hours Total Per Case 1,003.5 41.81 Extra/ compensation hours Phone calls 28 1.17 507 21.13 Miles traveled 97 4.04 # contacts recommended chemoprophylaxis Cost w/ overhead (2008) 148 6.17 $51,327 $2,138 5/7/2017 9 Research Question • Can we reduce costs by changing control measures/ protocols? – Oregon HD recommends chemoprophylaxis high risk contacts only – Report • substantial reductions in time spent on control of pertussis • better at identifying those who are most “at-risk” Source: Liko, Juventila and Paul Lewis (2008). Oregon Pertussis Guidelines: Before and After, National Immunization Conference presentation slides. All close contacts adult pertussis case Close contacts of infants Method • Decision / cost effectiveness analysis – Very little data – quantify uncertainty – Incorporate epidemiological and economic factors – TreeAge software • From the health department perspective Assumptions • Data driven – Attack rate in households – Cost of all close contact strategy – Vaccine uptake – Vaccine efficacy – Proportion of infants in population • Observational – Chemoprophylaxis compliance close contacts of infants – Efficacy of chemoprophylaxis early – Likelihood of early diagnosis – Cost per case close contact of infants – Cost per case treat Decision for Close Contacts of a Case All Close Contacts early vaccinated diagnosis (< 1wk) pertussis next to infant no false “+” all close contacts Depends on branches, natural transmission rate, vaccine efficacy, chemoprophylaxis efficacy| early Close Contacts of Infants next to infant close contacts of infants no false “+” not next to infant *Quiz*: There is an outbreak of pertussis at a local school. What is the best strategy? A. Hide under desk and call your mother! B. Call in sick. C. It depends! • • Do we want to prevent pertussis cases or infant cases? How many hours/ resources are available? 95% Vaccine Uptake Intervention All close contacts Close contacts of infants Monitor & treat case Estimated Adult Cases Estimated Estimated Infant Cases Cost($)1 Least Middle .0859 .0859 178,794 107,730 Most .134 42,508 1All cost figures are in December 2008 dollars. Preliminary data, results subject to change. ** “all close contacts” is more expensive, but has the same estimated number of infant cases as “close contacts of infants.” Comparing Strategies • Cost per additional case averted of strategy (i) relative to the TREAT strategy. Cost per additional Cost i – Cost TREAT case averted Cases TREAT Casesi Cost per case averted relative to TREAT (95% uptake) Intervention All Pertussis Cases Infant Pertussis Cases Close contacts of infants $60,390 $1,346,308 All close contacts $6,641 $2,813,224 All cost figures are in December 2008 dollars. Preliminary data, results subject to change. Cost per case averted relative to TREAT (20% uptake) Intervention All Pertussis Cases Infant Pertussis Cases Close contacts of infants $46,736 $1,355,471 All close contacts $6,575 $5,153,099 All cost figures are in December 2008 dollars. Preliminary data, results subject to change. Limitations & Future Work • More validation work on model • Health department perspective – Collecting more data on HD response costs • No lab testing costs • How many resources should a HD put into pertussis? • Developing a tool for HD departments Pertussis Outbreak Tool *Note: Preliminary demonstration data, not for analysis or use. Preliminary Conclusions • The best intervention strategy depends on a HD’s goals • When the aim is to protect infants and high risk contacts, the all close contact strategy is more expensive Acknowledgements • CDC – Division of Bacterial Diseases: Tami Skoff & Jennifer Liang, Tom Clark, Nancy Messonnier – HSREB, Mark Messonnier, Bo Cho, Fangjun Zhou – Division of HIV/ AIDS, Prabhu Vimalanand – NCIRD, Ismael Ortega-Sanchez • Douglas County HD, Omaha, NE – Adi Pour, Carol Allensworth, Anne O’Keefe, Bonnie Harmon, DCHD staff • Oregon State HD – Juventila Liko & Paul Cieslak Contact Information • Garrett R. Beeler Asay – Health Services Research and Evaluation Branch – Immunization Services Division – hrp9(AT)cdc.gov • Thank you! 5/7/2017 26 Appendix Slides Global Values Variable Base Best Worst Dist. P(infant) P(false “+”) P(vaccinated) .036 0.2 0.95 .2 0.1 0.9 .01 0.5 0.1 Triangular Uniform Triangular Vaccine efficacy P(early diagnosis) Prophylaxis efficacy| early diagnosis 0.8 0.2 0.9 0.4 0.5 0 Triangular Uniform 0.8 0.9 0.5 Uniform 0.3 0.5 0 Uniform 410 200 600 Uniform Prophylaxis efficacy| late diagnosis Cost of false positive Local Values All close contacts Base Best Worst Dist. Cost / case1 2,117 371 5,096 Triangular .5 .9 0 Uniform 1058.50 529.25 P(infant pertussis | close contacts of infants) 1 0.7 1 Uniform Prophylaxis compliance rate .9 1 .5 Uniform 410.1 205.03 615.09 Triangular Prophylaxis compliance rate Close contacts of infants Cost / case 1,587.75 Triangular Treat individual Cost / case 1 Beeler Asay et al. (2009), Lindahl & Poissant (2005), and Calugar et al. (2006).