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Public health impact of the adjuvanted RSVPreF3 vaccine for respiratory syncytial virus prevention among older adults in the United States
Molnar, D., La, EM., Verelst, F., Poston, S., Graham, J., Van Bellinghen, LA., & Curran, D. (2024). Public health impact of the adjuvanted RSVPreF3 vaccine for respiratory syncytial virus prevention among older adults in the United States. Infectious Diseases and Therapy, 13(4), 827-844. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40121-024-00939-w
IntroductionRespiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is an important cause of lower respiratory tract disease in older adults, resulting in substantial morbidity and mortality.MethodsThis study estimates the public health impact of vaccination with the adjuvanted RSVPreF3 vaccine among adults aged >= 60 years in the United States (US). A static, multi-cohort Markov model was used to estimate RSV-related outcomes over a 3-year time horizon for scenarios with and without one-time RSV vaccination. The base-case analysis assumed the same vaccination coverage as for influenza vaccines, with key epidemiology and vaccine inputs obtained from the published literature and phase 3 clinical trial results for the adjuvanted RSVPreF3 vaccine. Model outcomes included the clinical burden of RSV (symptomatic RSV acute respiratory illness [RSV-ARI] cases [classified as upper or lower respiratory tract disease], pneumonia complications, and mortality) and RSV-related healthcare resource use (hospitalizations, emergency department visits, outpatient visits, and antibiotic prescriptions).ResultsIn the base-case analysis, approximately 56.7 million adults aged >= 60 years received the vaccine, resulting in 2,954,465 fewer symptomatic RSV-ARI cases over 3 years compared with no vaccination, including 321,019 fewer X-ray confirmed pneumonia cases and 16,660 fewer RSV-related deaths. Vaccination also prevented a substantial number of RSV-related hospitalizations (203,891), emergency department visits (164,060), outpatient visits (1,577,586), and antibiotic prescriptions (1,343,915) over the 3-year period. A considerable public health impact was observed across a range of sensitivity analyses.ConclusionsThese findings highlight the potential of the adjuvanted RSVPreF3 vaccine to substantially reduce RSV disease burden among US older adults aged >= 60 years.