Seminar Abstracts
Statistical epidemiology of gonorrhoea: modelling the fitness cost and benefit of antibiotic resistance and potential impact of vaccination. Dr Lilith Whittles, Imperial College London.
Gonorrhoea is one of the most common sexually-transmitted bacterial infections in the UK. Almost half of the 44,000 cases recorded in 2017 occurred in men who have sex with men (MSM). The bacterium has developed resistance to each first-line antibiotic in turn, such that clinicians are running out of treatment options. We need to make informed decisions to combat antibiotic-resistant gonorrhoea, but are hampered by a lack of understanding in key areas, including: the dynamics of how resistance spreads, its relationship with antibiotic prescribing, and the potential impact of interventions, such as vaccination.
To improve understanding of the fitness benefits and costs of antibiotic resistance to inform control policy and planning, we developed a mathematical model that captures the dynamics of cefixime resistance observed in the UK from 2008-2015. Cefixime was abandoned because of rising resistance, but we found that the fitness cost is such that resistance levels have since dropped, and reintroduction could be considered to treat a minority of cases. Vaccination against gonorrhoea could extend the useful life of our first-line therapies. Although no gonococcus-specific vaccine exists, there is evidence that a meningococcal vaccine, MeNZB, offers partial protection. We investigated how efficacious and long-lasting a vaccine would be needed to control antibiotic resistance, and found that even partially-effective vaccines show great promise.