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The potential effect of improved provision of rabies post-exposure prophylaxis in Gavi-eligible countries: a modelling study

Produced by: WHO Rabies Modelling Consortium

January 2019, The Lancet

Summary

Current rabies post-exposure prophylaxis use saves many lives, but availability remains poor in many rabies-endemic countries due to high costs, poor access, and supply.

The authors developed epidemiological and economic models to investigate the effect of an investment in post-exposure prophylaxis by Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance.

They predict more than 1 million deaths will occur in the 67 rabies-endemic countries considered from 2020 to 2035, under the status quo.

Current post-exposure prophylaxis use prevents approximately 56,000 deaths annually. Expanded access to, and free provision of, post-exposure prophylaxis would prevent an additional 489,000 deaths between 2020 and 2035.

Under this switch to efficient intradermal post-exposure prophylaxis regimens, total projected vaccine needs remain similar (about 73 million vials) yet 17ยท4 million more people are vaccinated, making this an extremely cost-effective method, with costs of US$635 per death averted and $33 per disability-adjusted life-years averted.

Scaling up dog vaccination programmes could eliminate dog-mediated rabies over this time period; improved post-exposure prophylaxis access remains cost-effective under this scenario, especially in combination with patient risk assessments to reduce unnecessary post-exposure prophylaxis use.

Investing in post-exposure vaccines would be an extremely cost-effective intervention that could substantially reduce disease burden and catalyse dog vaccination efforts to eliminate dog-mediated rabies.