Modeling of rotavirus transmission dynamics and impact of vaccination in Ghana
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Date
2020-06-05
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Vaccine
Abstract
Background: Rotavirus incidence remains relatively high in low-income countries (LICs) compared to
high-income countries (HICs) after vaccine introduction. Ghana introduced monovalent rotavirus vaccine
in April 2012 and despite the high coverage, vaccine performance has been modest compared to developed
countries. The predictors of low vaccine effectiveness in LICs are poorly understood, and the drivers
of subnational heterogeneity in rotavirus vaccine impact are unknown.
Methods: We used mathematical models to investigate variations in rotavirus incidence in
children <5 years old in Ghana. We fit models to surveillance and case-control data from three different
hospitals: Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital in Accra, Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital in Kumasi, and War
Memorial Hospital in Navrongo. The models were fitted to both pre- and post-vaccine data to estimate
parameters describing the transmission rate, waning of maternal immunity, and vaccine response rate.
Results: The seasonal pattern and age distribution of rotavirus cases varied among the three study sites in
Ghana. Our model was able to capture the spatio-temporal variations in rotavirus incidence across the
three sites and showed good agreement with the age distribution of observed cases. The rotavirus transmission
rate was highest in Accra and lowest in Navrongo, while the estimated duration of maternal
immunity was longer (~5 months) in Accra and Kumasi and shorter (~3 months) in Navrongo. The proportion
of infants who responded to the vaccine was estimated to be high in Accra and Kumasi and
low in Navrongo.
Conclusions: Rotavirus vaccine impact varies within Ghana. A low vaccine response rate was estimated
for Navrongo, where rotavirus is highly seasonal and incidence limited to a few months of the year.
Our findings highlight the need to further explore the relationship between rotavirus seasonality, maternal
immunity, and vaccine response rate to determine how they influence vaccine effectiveness and to
develop strategies to improve vaccine impact.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Ghana, Rotavirus, Vaccine impact, Vaccine response rate, Maternal immunity, Transmission rate