Modeling the economic value of a Chagas' disease therapeutic vaccine

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Abstract

The health burden of Chagas' disease (resulting from Trypanosoma cruzi infection) in Latin America (estimated to outweigh that of malaria by 5-fold and affect 2-6 million people in Mexico alone) has motivated development of therapeutic vaccines to prevent infection progression to severe disease. Our economic model for a Chagas' therapeutic vaccine in Mexico suggests that a vaccine would be highly cost-effective and in many cases economically dominant (providing both cost savings and health benefits) throughout a range of protection durations, severe adverse event risk and dosing regimens and would be most likely to provide a positive return on investment if the vaccine prevented (rather than delayed) the onset of cardiomyopathy. © 2012 Landes Bioscience.

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Lee, B. Y., Bacon, K. M., Wateska, A. R., Bottazzi, M. E., Dumonteil, E., & Hotez, P. J. (2012). Modeling the economic value of a Chagas’ disease therapeutic vaccine. Human Vaccines and Immunotherapeutics, 8(9), 1293–1301. https://doi.org/10.4161/hv.20966

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