TB Research

Health and Economic Impacts of Introducing Vaccae and Enhanced Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis Management Strategies in China.

Pei-Yao Zhai, Xiao Zang, Ting Jiang, Jian Feng, Bin Zhang, Lei Zhang, Zhi-Xian Chen, Yan-Lin Zhao, et al. (9 authors)

The Journal of infectious diseases · 2025-06

Abstract

BACKGROUND: China faces high burden of multidrug-resistant or rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis (MDR/RR-TB). We aimed to evaluate the impacts of Vaccae vaccination and enhanced drug-resistant TB (DR-TB) management strategies.

METHODS: Using a compartmental model calibrated with national TB data, we evaluated 9 interventions: enhanced DR-TB management (S1); Vaccae vaccination for those with latent TB infection, targeting specific age groups (S2: adolescents, S3: adolescents and young adults, S4: working-age adults, S5: elderly); and combined strategies S6-S9. Vaccae's efficacy was 0.547 for the first 5 years, then waning annually. Costs were US$28/dose for Vaccae, US$87/test for Xpert MTB/RIF, and US$13 818/course for BPaLM.

RESULTS: Strategy S1 is projected to reduce MDR/RR-TB incidence and mortality by 21% (95% UI, 8%-46%) and 54% (38%-67%), respectively, by 2050. Strategy S9 (S5+S1) is more effective, reducing the incidence by 44% (35%-61%) and mortality by 68% (52%-78%), with an ICER of US$7222 (4460-10 779) per DALY averted compared with S1. Additionally, S9 could prevent 24.2 (13.5-32.9) million patient-months of second-line treatment from 2025 to 2050.

CONCLUSIONS: Prioritizing Vaccae vaccination for the elderly and enhancing DR-TB management offer a promising and cost-effective opportunity for China. The findings may have policy implications for other low- and middle-income countries with high MDR/RR-TB burden.

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • China
  • Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant
  • Adult
  • Adolescent
  • Young Adult
  • Middle Aged
  • Tuberculosis Vaccines
  • Male
  • Aged
  • Female
  • Incidence
  • Cost-Benefit Analysis
  • Antitubercular Agents
  • Vaccination
  • Child