An sveir model for assessing potential impact of an imperfect anti-SARS vaccine
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Department of Mathematics, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, R3T 2N2
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Department of Mathematics, Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, Ontario
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Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of New Brunswick, Fredericton, New Brunswick, E3B 5A3
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Received:
01 September 2005
Accepted:
29 June 2018
Published:
01 May 2006
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MSC :
92D30.
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The control of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), a fatal
contagious viral disease that spread to over 32 countries in 2003,
was based on quarantine of latently infected individuals and isolation of
individuals with clinical symptoms of SARS. Owing to the recent ongoing clinical trials of
some candidate anti-SARS vaccines, this study aims to assess, via mathematical modelling, the potential impact of a SARS vaccine,
assumed to be imperfect, in curtailing future outbreaks. A
relatively simple deterministic model is designed for this purpose.
It is shown, using Lyapunov function theory and the theory of compound matrices, that the dynamics
of the model are determined by a certain threshold
quantity known as the control reproduction number ($\R_{v}$). If
$\R_{v}\le 1$, the disease will be eliminated from the community; whereas
an epidemic occurs if $\R_{v}>1$. This study further shows that an
imperfect SARS vaccine with infection-blocking efficacy is always
beneficial in reducing disease spread within the community, although
its overall impact increases with increasing efficacy and coverage.
In particular, it is shown that the
fraction of individuals vaccinated at steady-state and vaccine
efficacy play equal roles in reducing disease burden, and the
vaccine must have efficacy of at least 75% to lead to effective
control of SARS (assuming $\R=4$). Numerical simulations are used to explore the
severity of outbreaks when $\R_{v}>1$.
Citation: Abba B. Gumel, C. Connell McCluskey, James Watmough. An sveir model for assessing potential impact of an imperfect anti-SARS vaccine[J]. Mathematical Biosciences and Engineering, 2006, 3(3): 485-512. doi: 10.3934/mbe.2006.3.485
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Abstract
The control of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), a fatal
contagious viral disease that spread to over 32 countries in 2003,
was based on quarantine of latently infected individuals and isolation of
individuals with clinical symptoms of SARS. Owing to the recent ongoing clinical trials of
some candidate anti-SARS vaccines, this study aims to assess, via mathematical modelling, the potential impact of a SARS vaccine,
assumed to be imperfect, in curtailing future outbreaks. A
relatively simple deterministic model is designed for this purpose.
It is shown, using Lyapunov function theory and the theory of compound matrices, that the dynamics
of the model are determined by a certain threshold
quantity known as the control reproduction number ($\R_{v}$). If
$\R_{v}\le 1$, the disease will be eliminated from the community; whereas
an epidemic occurs if $\R_{v}>1$. This study further shows that an
imperfect SARS vaccine with infection-blocking efficacy is always
beneficial in reducing disease spread within the community, although
its overall impact increases with increasing efficacy and coverage.
In particular, it is shown that the
fraction of individuals vaccinated at steady-state and vaccine
efficacy play equal roles in reducing disease burden, and the
vaccine must have efficacy of at least 75% to lead to effective
control of SARS (assuming $\R=4$). Numerical simulations are used to explore the
severity of outbreaks when $\R_{v}>1$.
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