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Effectiveness of PCVs, rotavirus vaccines in preventing antibiotic use associated with ARI, diarrhoea in LMICs

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Researchers at CDDEP, University of California, Imperial College London assessed impact of vaccines recently implemented in World Health Organisation’s Expanded Programme on Immunisation on antibiotic consumption among children under five in LMICs

Researchers at CDDEP, Berkeley, and Imperial College London assessed the impact of PCVs and rotavirus vaccines on antibiotic consumption among children in low and middle-income countries.

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) poses a serious threat to the health and economic well-being of countries worldwide. This burden disproportionately impacts low and middle-income countries (LMICs) where antibiotic overuse exists alongside lack of access to such drugs. Acute respiratory infection (ARI) and diarrhoea are the leading causes of antibiotic use in LMICs, where lack of diagnostic tools may lead to inappropriate antibiotic prescriptions based on suspicion. Vaccines have been hypothesised to reduce the burden of AMR by preventing infections that lead to antibiotic consumption, although evidence assessing this relationship is lacking.

Researchers at CDDEP, University of California, and Imperial College London assessed the impact of vaccines recently implemented in the World Health Organisation’s Expanded Programme on Immunisation on antibiotic consumption among children under five in LMICs. They focussed on the effect of the pneumococcal conjugate vaccines (PCVs) 10 and 13 and live attenuated rotavirus vaccines to prevent the main causes of ARI and diarrhoea, respectively.

The researchers used data from large-scale household surveys to quantify the incidence of antibiotic consumption among children prevented by PCV10 / 13 and rotavirus vaccines by calculating the following:

  • The incidence of antibiotic treatment for ARI and diarrhoea among children in LMICs
  • The effectiveness of the PCV and rotavirus vaccines in preventing antibiotic use associated with ARI and diarrhoea
  • The proportion of antibiotic-treated ARI and diarrhoea cases attributable to vaccine-serotype S pneumoniae and rotavirus, respectively

The study found that PCVs and the rotavirus vaccine are associated with a 19.7 per cent (95 per cent confidence interval, 3.4–43.4 per cent) and 11.4 per cent (4.0–18.6 per cent) reduction in cases of antibiotic-treated ARI and diarrhoea, respectively, among children 24-59 months old.  Translated to India, this represents a major reduction in the number of infections.

The vaccines prevent an estimated 23.8 million and 13.6 million cases of antibiotic-treated ARI and diarrhoea per year among children in LMICs under current vaccination coverage levels. Universal coverage of these vaccines could prevent an additional 40 million cases of antibiotic-treated illnesses. Results of this study indicate that vaccines against S pneumoniae and rotavirus significantly reduce antibiotic consumption among children in LMICs, and support vaccination as a global strategy to combat AMR.

“Despite the current attention on COVID-19, the longer-term infectious disease threat that India faces, is on antibiotic resistance. This study, the first of its kind, shows that scaling up the PCV and rotavirus vaccines are among the most effective methods to reduce antibiotic consumption in a country like India” said Ramanan Laxminarayan, Director, CDDEP and senior author.

The study titled ‘Childhood vaccines and antibiotic use in low and middle-income countries’ was published in Nature.

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