Assessing the cost-effectiveness of annual COVID-19 booster vaccination in South Korea using a transmission dynamic model

Author:

Choi Wongyeong,Shim Eunha

Abstract

IntroductionWe evaluated the cost-effectiveness of South Korea’s planned annual coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) booster campaign scheduled for October 2023.Materials and methodsAn age-structured mathematical model was used to analyze the public impacts and cost-effectiveness of vaccination across three vaccination strategies: uniform allocation and prioritizing those over 65 or those over 50 years old. We calculated the incremental cost per quality-adjusted life year (QALY) from both healthcare and societal perspectives. The maximum vaccine cost for cost-effectiveness was also identified.ResultsOur analysis highlights the cost-effectiveness of South Korea’s annual COVID-19 vaccination program in mitigating health and economic impacts. The most cost-effective strategy is uniform vaccine allocation, offering the lowest incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) at US$ 25,787/QALY. However, with a relatively high attack rate, the strategy prioritizing individuals over 65 years emerges as more cost-effective, lowering the ICER to US$ 13,785/QALY. Prioritizing those over 50 was less cost-effective. All strategies were cost-saving from a societal perspective, with cost-effectiveness being more sensitive to vaccine price than to its effectiveness.DiscussionOur results imply a potential strategy shift in current vaccination plan, with uniform vaccine distribution being more cost-effective than prioritizing older adults. Early estimation of viral transmissibility and vaccine effectiveness is crucial in determining the most cost-effective vaccine allocation approach.

Funder

National Research Foundation of Korea

Ministry of Education

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference33 articles.

1. Should COVID vaccines be given yearly? Proposal divides US scientists;Kozlov;Nature,2023

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