4.5 Article

Meningococcal Disease in the Post-COVID-19 Era: A Time to Prepare

Journal

INFECTIOUS DISEASES AND THERAPY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER LONDON LTD
DOI: 10.1007/s40121-023-00888-w

Keywords

COVID-19; Epidemiology; Immunization programs; Incidence; Vaccines

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The global landscape of invasive meningococcal disease (IMD) has changed during the COVID-19 pandemic, with decreased incidence rates due to mitigation measures. However, some countries have experienced an increase in IMD cases and rates that may exceed pre-pandemic levels. Other concerns include vaccination coverage gaps, increased incidence of other respiratory pathogens, immunity debt, and increased variability in IMD epidemiology.
The global invasive meningococcal disease (IMD) landscape changed considerably during the COVID-19 pandemic, as evidenced by decreased incidence rates due to COVID-19 mitigation measures, such as limited social contact, physical distancing, mask wearing, and hand washing. Vaccination rates were also lower during the pandemic relative to pre-pandemic levels. Although policymakers may have shifted their focus away from IMD vaccination programs to COVID-19 vaccination programs, strong arguments support implementation and prioritization of IMD vaccination programs; IMD cases have increased in some countries and IMD rates may even have exceeded pre-pandemic levels. Additional concerns include increased susceptibility due to vaccination coverage gaps, increased incidence of other respiratory pathogens, immunity debt from lockdown restrictions, and increased IMD epidemiologic variability. The full range of benefits of widely available and effective meningococcal vaccines needs to be considered, especially in health technology assessments, where the broad benefits of these vaccines are neither accurately quantified nor captured in implementation policy decisions. Importantly, implementation of meningococcal vaccination programs in the current IMD climate also appeals to broader healthcare principles, including preparedness rather than reactive approaches, generally accepted benefit-risk approaches to vaccination, historical precedent, and the World Health Organization's goal of defeating meningitis by 2030. Countries should therefore act swiftly to bolster existing meningococcal vaccination strategies to provide broad coverage across age groups and serogroups given the recent increases in IMD incidence.

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