Comparative effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of policies for provisioning rabies post-exposure vaccines (original) (raw)
Changalucha, J. et al. (2026) Comparative effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of policies for provisioning rabies post-exposure vaccines.Vaccine, 74, 128178. (doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2025.128178)
Abstract
Introduction: The burden of rabies remains high in low-income countries, where limited access to life-saving post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) leads to preventable deaths. Lack of evidence on the implications of PEP provisioning strategies impedes policy development. We evaluate three PEP strategies under consideration in Tanzania, comparing current limited access, improved access with free provision, and free provision combined with Integrated Bite Case Management (IBCM). Methods: We examined data from IBCM implementation on PEP delivery practices, healthcare-seeking, and rabies risk across four Tanzanian regions. Using these data within a decision tree model, we evaluate health outcomes and economic impacts of proposed PEP policies from the healthcare provider perspective, projecting vaccine requirements, costs, and deaths across Tanzania over a five-year period (2026–2030). Results: We project approximately 59,000 (95 % PI: 32,000–96,000) rabies exposures nationwide over five years. With this exposure risk, current PEP access leads to around 800 deaths annually (95 % PI: 400–1200). Improved PEP access increases patients starting PEP, driving vaccine requirements to around 24,000 (95 % CI: 14,000–34,000) vials per year and reducing deaths by >40 %. Introducing IBCM reduces total projected deaths over 2026–2030 from 2300 to 2000 while remaining highly cost-effective at $181 per death averted. Conclusion: Tanzania's current PEP practice fails to meet the demand for rabies prevention, leading to preventable deaths. Free PEP is a more effective alternative, and implementing IBCM would further strengthen the country's rabies response and accelerate progress toward the target to end human rabies deaths by 2030.
| Item Type: | Articles |
|---|---|
| Additional Information: | This work was funded by Wellcome (207569/Z/17/Z and 224520/ Z/21/Z), the UK Medical Research Council (MR/Z504919/1), and the US Department of Health and Human Services of the National Institutes of Health (R01AI141712). |
| Keywords: | One health, lyssavirus, Gavi, integrated bite case management, IBCM, dog-mediated rabies, zero by 30. |
| Status: | Published |
| Refereed: | Yes |
| Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID: | Hampson, Professor Katie and Luka, Ms Martha and changalucha, Mr joel and Anderson, Danni and Lushasi, Mr Kennedy and Sikana, Mr Lwitiko and Lankester, Dr Felix and Rees, Dr Eleanor and Sambo, Dr Maganga and Ferguson, Dr Elaine |
| Creator Roles: | changalucha, j.Writing – review and editing, Writing – original draft, Project administration, Methodology, Formal analysis, Data curation, ConceptualizationFerguson, E.Data curationLuka, M.Data curationLushasi, K.Investigation, Data curationRees, E.Data curationAnderson, D.Formal analysis, Data curationSambo, M.ConceptualizationSikana, L.ConceptualizationLankester, F.Writing – review and editing, Supervision, Funding acquisition, Formal analysis, ConceptualizationHampson, K.Writing – review and editing, Supervision, Project administration, Funding acquisition, Formal analysis, Data curation, Conceptualization |
| Authors: | Changalucha, J., Ferguson, E., Luka, M. M., Lushasi, K., Rees, E., Anderson, D., Hoffu, H., Gwakisa, S., Mtema, Z., Sambo, M., Sharadhuri, K., Sikana, L., Lupindu, A., Yoder, J., Lankester, F., and Hampson, K. |
| College/School: | College of Medical Veterinary and Life SciencesCollege of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Biodiversity, One Health & Veterinary Medicine |
| Journal Name: | Vaccine |
| Publisher: | Elsevier |
| ISSN: | 0264-410X |
| ISSN (Online): | 1873-2518 |
| Published Online: | 20 January 2026 |
| Copyright Holders: | Copyright © 2026 The Authors |
| First Published: | First published in Vaccine 74:128178 |
| Publisher Policy: | Reproduced under a Creative Commons license |
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Funder and Project Information
The Science of Rabies Elimination
Katie Hampson
207569/Z/17/Z
SBOHVM - Infectious Disease Ecology
Data-driven approaches for rabies elimination (renewal)
Katie Hampson
224520/Z/21/Z
SBOHVM - Infectious Disease Ecology
A One Health Response for Rabies Control: Integrating Disease Control Measures and Capacity Building in Community-Based Multidisciplinary Teams, linked to 324280
Katie Hampson
MR/Z504919/1
SBOHVM - Infectious Disease Ecology
Deposit and Record Details
| ID Code: | 375932 |
|---|---|
| Depositing User: | Dr Lisa Turner Warnecke |
| Datestamp: | 19 Jan 2026 14:31 |
| Last Modified: | 22 Jan 2026 02:31 |
| Date of acceptance: | 23 December 2025 |
| Date of first online publication: | 20 January 2026 |
| Date Deposited: | 19 January 2026 |
| Data Availability Statement: | Yes |