Vaccines (Nov 2024)
The Health and Economic Effects of PCV15 and PCV20 During the First Year of Life in the US
Abstract
(1) Background/Objectives: Two pneumococcal conjugate vaccines, 15-(PCV15) and 20-(PCV20) valent formulations, are routinely recommended for US children in a 3+1 schedule. The first three doses are administered during the first year of life at 2, 4, and 6 months, while a booster dose is given at 12 to 15 months. This study evaluated the health and economic effects of the PCV20 infant series within the first year of life compared to PCV15. (2) Methods: Using a decision-analytic model, we calculated the health and economic effects of introducing PCV15 or PCV20 for five subsequent birth cohorts. Epidemiological data were drawn from peer-reviewed studies and estimates for vaccine effectiveness were extrapolated from established PCV13 effectiveness and PCV7 efficacy studies. Direct medical costs related to the disease treatment were extracted from the literature and inflated to 2024 dollars. (3) Results: Over the course of five years, the implementation of PCV20 vaccination for newborns in the United States, compared to PCV15, is projected to prevent an additional 220 cases of invasive pneumococcal disease, 6542 cases of community-acquired pneumonia, and 112,095 cases of otitis media within the first year of life across five subsequent birth cohorts. This strategy could prevent 66 infant deaths linked to these illnesses and confer extra health gains, amounting to 5058 years of life and 5037 quality-adjusted life years. These prevented cases are estimated to save approximately USD 147 million over 5 years. (4) Conclusions: This study demonstrated that vaccinating with PCV20 during the first 12 months of life compared to PCV15 in the US would yield a substantially greater health and economic return due to the five additional serotypes covered by PCV20.
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