Effectiveness of pneumococcal vaccination campaigns in humanitarian settings: a modelling study

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Abstract

Background

A large and increasing number of people are forcibly displaced worldwide because of war, food insecurity, and other crises. Streptococcus pneumoniae (the pneumococcus) likely causes a substantial health burden in crisis-affected populations, but pneumococcal vaccines (PCVs) are rarely used in humanitarian responses. We evaluated the potential impact of logistically feasible PCV campaigns in such settings.

Methods

We conducted a pneumococcal carriage, malnutrition and social contact survey in a camp for displaced people near Hargeisa, Somaliland, to parameterise a transmission model accounting for migration. We projected the effect of PCV mass-vaccination campaigns using one or two doses and vaccinating children <1, 2, 5, 10 or 15 years (y) of age in the Somaliland camp and three different crisis settings.

Findings

A single-dose PCV campaign with high vaccine coverage in children <5y or older can partially control vaccine-serotypes for up to three years, preventing 27% (95%CrI 20-34) of severe pneumococcal disease when vaccinating <5y olds and 38% (95%CrI 29-46) when vaccinating <15y olds. Expanded age eligibility is needed for comparable protection in settings with increased migration or more interaction with unvaccinated host populations. A campaign vaccinating <5y olds is the most efficient use of PCV with 108 (95%CrI 77-162) vaccines needed to prevent one case of severe pneumococcal disease. Implementing such campaigns in displaced populations worldwide would require about 40 million doses in the next five years.

Interpretation

Single-dose PCV mass-vaccination campaigns offer crisis-affected populations an effective, pragmatic immunisation strategy.

Funding

This study was funded by Elrha’s Research for Health in Humanitarian Crises (R2HC) Programme.

Research in context

Evidence before this study

Acute respiratory infections are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in crisis-affected populations, but pneumococcal conjugate vaccines are rarely used in humanitarian responses. Routine vaccination is often not feasible in these settings due to a lack of access or security, and there is little guidance on alternative delivery options for these vaccines. A literature search on Apr 10, 2025, using the terms (“pneumococcal conjugate vaccine*” OR “PCV”) AND (“humanitarian” AND (“cris*” OR “emergenc*”)) returned 9 results on Embase and 8 results on PubMed. PCV mass vaccination strategies have previously been shown to be cost-effective in crisis settings, but no study has directly compared the effect and efficiency of different age eligibility and dosing regimens in crisis-affected populations.

Added value of this study

We collected key primary data that would allow us to parameterise a model to project the effect of different PCV campaigns on the transmission of vaccine-type pneumococci. To our knowledge, this is the first analysis that has assessed the combined direct and indirect effect of PCV campaigns in crisis-settings. We show the importance of achieving high levels of indirect protection for a substantial and sustained impact, which can be realized by vaccinating the main transmitters in addition to the children at highest risk of severe disease. We show that this can likely be achieved using a single-dose strategy, which greatly improves the feasibility of a campaign.

Implications of all the available evidence.

Single-dose mass-vaccination PCV campaigns that achieve high coverage in children up to 14 years (y) of age can provide substantial health benefits in crisis-affected populations. Vaccinating <5y olds may be most efficient. Temporarily disrupting transmission of vaccine-type pneumococci is crucial to protect unvaccinated children born or in-migrated after the campaign.

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