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. 2013 Jul 25;8(7):e68940.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0068940. Print 2013.

Targeting imperfect vaccines against drug-resistance determinants: a strategy for countering the rise of drug resistance

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Targeting imperfect vaccines against drug-resistance determinants: a strategy for countering the rise of drug resistance

Regina Joice et al. PLoS One. .

Abstract

The growing prevalence of antimicrobial resistance in major pathogens is outpacing discovery of new antimicrobial classes. Vaccines mitigate the effect of antimicrobial resistance by reducing the need for treatment, but vaccines for many drug-resistant pathogens remain undiscovered or have limited efficacy, in part because some vaccines selectively favor pathogen strains that escape vaccine-induced immunity. A strain with even a modest advantage in vaccinated hosts can have high fitness in a population with high vaccine coverage, which can offset a strong selection pressure such as antimicrobial use that occurs in a small fraction of hosts. We propose a strategy to target vaccines against drug-resistant pathogens, by using resistance-conferring proteins as antigens in multicomponent vaccines. Resistance determinants may be weakly immunogenic, offering only modest specific protection against resistant strains. Therefore, we assess here how varying the specific efficacy of the vaccine against resistant strains would affect the proportion of drug-resistant vs. -sensitive strains population-wide for three pathogens--Streptococcus pneumoniae, Staphylococcus aureus, and influenza virus--in which drug resistance is a problem. Notably, if such vaccines confer even slightly higher protection (additional efficacy between 1% and 8%) against resistant variants than sensitive ones, they may be an effective tool in controlling the rise of resistant strains, given current levels of use for many antimicrobial agents. We show that the population-wide impact of such vaccines depends on the additional effect on resistant strains and on the overall effect (against all strains). Resistance-conferring accessory gene products or resistant alleles of essential genes could be valuable as components of vaccines even if their specific protective effect is weak.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing Interests: Marc Lipsitch receives consulting income and honoraria from Pfizer and Novartis. There are no patents, products in development or marketed products to declare. This does not alter the authors' adherence to all the PLoS ONE policies on sharing data and materials.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1. Modeling a vaccine with increased efficacy against drug-resistance determinants for an endemic colonizing pathogen (S. pneumoniae).
a, SIS model with a proportion formula image of the population vaccinated and initially susceptible (formula image) and formula image unvaccinated and initially susceptible (formula image), who can get infected with either the drug-sensitive strain (formula image subscript), –resistant strain (formula image subscript), or both (formula image subscript) strains. Plots depict model state at equilibrium (all drug-resistant, all drug-sensitive, stable co-existence of both strains, or elimination of all strains) across a range of overall vaccine efficacy (formula image) and additional vaccine efficacy against resistant strain (formula image), where vaccine coverage is 80%. Plots show situation with no fitness cost (b) and with 8% fitness cost (c). Color scheme throughout the paper is as follows: uninfected (gray), sensitive (blue), resistant (red), co-infected with both strains/coexistence of both strains (purple). This model corresponds to Model E of Ref .
Figure 2
Figure 2. Modeling a vaccine against drug-resistance determinants for an endemic colonizing pathogen for which no vaccine currently exists (S. aureus).
a, SIS model with a proportion formula image of the population as vaccinated susceptibles (formula image) and formula image as unvaccinated susceptibles (formula image), who can get colonized with either the drug-sensitive (formula image subscript), or –resistant (formula image subscript) strain. b, Contour plot of equilibrium stability conditions as a function of vaccine coverage (formula image) and specific vaccine efficacy against resistant strain (formula image), for 3 fitness costs. Stability conditions for the resistant-only and sensitive-only equilibrium were obtained analytically and were mutually exclusive. The stable equilibrium state is plotted by color as a function of fitness cost (different panels), vaccine efficacy against the resistant strain (x-axis) and vaccine coverage (y-axis).
Figure 3
Figure 3. Modeling a vaccine with increased efficacy against drug-resistance determinants for an epidemic pathogen (seasonal influenza).
a, SIR model with a proportion formula image of the population as vaccinated susceptibles (formula image subscript) and formula image as unvaccinated susceptibles (formula image subscript), who can get infected with either the drug-sensitive (formula image superscript) or –resistant (formula image superscript) strains, get treated (formula image superscript) or not (formula image superscript) and are removed due to recovery or death (formula image). This is the model of Ref. , modified to include vaccination. b, Model evaluations for final cumulative proportion resistant among all infections over the course of one season, as a function of the additional vaccine efficacy formula image against resistant, compared to sensitive strains (x-axis) and the fraction of influenza infections treated (y-axis). Here, vaccine coverage is 40% and formula image = 59%.

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References

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