Fernando de la Hoz
National University of Colombia
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Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 2001
José Luis Di Fabio; Elizabeth Castañeda; Clara Inés Agudelo; Fernando de la Hoz; Maria Hortal; Teresa Camou; Gabriela Echániz-Aviles; Maria Noemi Carnalla Barajas; Ingrid Heitmann; Juan Carlos Hormazábal; Maria Cristina de Cunto Brandileone; Vera Simonsen Dias Vieira; Mabel Regueira; Raul Ruvinski; Alejandra Corso; Marguerite Lovgren; James Talbot; Ciro A. de Quadros
BACKGROUND Since 1993 the Pan American Health Organization has coordinated a surveillance network with the National Reference Laboratories of Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico and Uruguay aimed at monitoring capsular types and antimicrobial susceptibility of Streptococcus pneumoniae causing invasive disease in children <6 years of age. METHODS The surveillance system included children 6 years of age and younger with invasive disease caused by S. pneumoniae. The identification, capsular typing and susceptibility to penicillin of the isolates were conducted using a common protocol, based on standard methodologies. RESULTS By June, 1999, 4,105 invasive pneumococcal isolates had been collected mainly from pneumonia (44.1%) and meningitis (41.1%) cases. Thirteen capsular types accounting for 86.1% of the isolates (14, 6A/6B, 5, 1, 23F, 19F, 18C, 19A, 9V, 7F, 3, 9N and 4) remained the most common types during the surveillance period. Diminished susceptibility to penicillin was detected in 28.6% of the isolates, 17.3% with intermediate and 11.3% with high level resistance. Resistance varied among countries and increased during this period in Argentina, Colombia and Uruguay. Serotypes 14 and 23F accounted for 66.6% of the resistance. CONCLUSION These surveillance data clearly demonstrate the potential impact of the introduction of a conjugate vaccine on pneumococcal disease and the need for more judicious use of antibiotics to slow or reverse the development of antimicrobial resistance.Background. Since 1993 the Pan American Health Organization has coordinated a surveillance network with the National Reference Laboratories of Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico and Uruguay aimed at monitoring capsular types and antimicrobial susceptibility of Streptococcus pneumoniae causing invasive disease in children <6 years of age. Methods. The surveillance system included children 6 years of age and younger with invasive disease caused by S. pneumoniae. The identification, capsular typing and susceptibility to penicillin of the isolates were conducted using a common protocol, based on standard methodologies. Results. By June, 1999, 4105 invasive pneumococcal isolates had been collected mainly from pneumonia (44.1%) and meningitis (41.1%) cases. Thirteen capsular types accounting for 86.1% of the isolates (14, 6A/6B, 5, 1, 23F, 19F, 18C, 19A, 9V, 7F, 3, 9N and 4) remained the most common types during the surveillance period. Diminished susceptibility to penicillin was detected in 28.6% of the isolates, 17.3% with intermediate and 11.3% with high level resistance. Resistance varied among countries and increased during this period in Argentina, Colombia and Uruguay. Serotypes 14 and 23F accounted for 66.6% of the resistance. Conclusion. These surveillance data clearly demonstrate the potential impact of the introduction of a conjugate vaccine on pneumococcal disease and the need for more judicious use of antibiotics to slow or reverse the development of antimicrobial resistance.
Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 2009
Elizabeth Castañeda; Clara Inés Agudelo; Mabel Regueira; Alejandra Corso; Maria Cristina de Cunto Brandileone; Angela Pires Brandão; Aurora Maldonado; Juan Carlos Hormazábal; Isis T. Martínez; Rafael Llanes; Jacqueline Sánchez; Jesús M Feris; Gabriela Echániz-Aviles; María Noemí Carnalla-Barajas; Mónica G. V. Terrazas; Irma H. Monroy; Gustavo Chamorro; Natalie Weiler; Teresa Camou; Gabriela García Gabarrot; Enza Spadola; Daisy Payares; Jean Marc Gabastou; José Luis Di Fabio; Fernando de la Hoz
Background: For the last 14 years the Pan American Health Organization has been promoting surveillance of invasive pneumococcal disease in Latin American children for better understanding of the disease tendencies regarding capsular types circulation in each country and susceptibility to antimicrobials. Methods: Laboratory-based surveillance data from 10 Latin American countries collected from 2000 to 2005 were analyzed, including serotype distribution and susceptibility to beta-lactam antibiotics. Results: Although 61 different capsular types were identified during the 6-year surveillance, 13 serotypes accounted for 86% of all isolates. These were consistently the most prevalent throughout the study period with serotype 14 predominating. Diminished susceptibility to penicillin was detected in 38% of all Streptococcus pneumoniae isolates, with the highest prevalence in Dominican Republic and Mexico. Decreased susceptibility to penicillin increased in Brazil and Colombia whereas decreased high resistance rates was recorded in Chile. Conclusions: These data indicate that 10 countries of the Region continue to have high quality laboratory-based surveillance for pneumococcal disease thus generating valuable information so that healthcare decision makers may prioritize interventions. The heptavalent vaccine will potentially cover from 52.4% to 76.5% of strains causing invasive pneumococcal disease and the 13 valent from 76.7% to 88.3%.
Revista Panamericana De Salud Publica-pan American Journal of Public Health | 2009
María Teresa Valenzuela; Rosalyn O'Loughlin; Fernando de la Hoz; Elizabeth Gomez; Dagna Constenla; Anushua Sinha; Juan Esteban Valencia; Brendan Flannery; Ciro A. de Quadros
OBJECTIVE To conduct a comprehensive review of data on pneumococcal disease incidence in Latin America and the Caribbean and project the annual number of pneumococcal disease episodes and deaths among children < 5 years of age in the region. METHODS We carried out a systematic review (1990 to 2006) on the burden of pneumococcal disease in children < 5 years of age in the region. We summarized annual incidence rates and case fatality ratios using medians and interquartile ranges for invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) (including all-IPD and separately abstracting pneumococcal meningitis, pneumonia, bacteremia, and sepsis data), pneumonia (all cause and radiologically confirmed), and acute otitis media by age group: < 1 year, < 2 years, and < 5 years. We modeled age-specific cumulative incidence of disease obtained from standard Kaplan-Meier analysis and projected data to obtain regional estimates of disease burden. We adjusted burden estimates by serotype coverage, vaccination coverage, and vaccine efficacy to estimate the number of cases and deaths averted. RESULTS Of 5 998 citations identified, 26 papers from 10 countries were included. The estimated annual burden of pneumonia, meningitis, and acute otitis media caused by pneumococcus in children < 5 years of age ranged from 980 000 to 1 500 000, 2 600 to 6 800, and 980 000 to 1 500 000, respectively. An estimated 12 000 to 28 000 deaths due to pneumococcal disease occur in the region annually. Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine could save 1 life per 1 100 and prevent 1 case per 13 children vaccinated. CONCLUSION A substantial burden of pneumococcal disease in the region is potentially preventable with pneumococcal conjugate vaccines and should be considered in regional vaccine decision making. Results are limited by the very few studies, conducted in selected settings, included in this review.
Revista Panamericana De Salud Publica-pan American Journal of Public Health | 2008
Anushua Sinha; Dagna Constenla; Juan Esteban Valencia; Rosalyn O'Loughlin; Elizabeth Gomez; Fernando de la Hoz; María Teresa Valenzuela; Ciro A. de Quadros
OBJECTIVE In Latin America and the Caribbean, routine vaccination of infants against Streptococcus pneumoniae would need substantial investment by governments and donor organizations. Policymakers need information about the projected health benefits, costs, and cost-effectiveness of vaccination when considering these investments. Our aim was to incorporate vaccine, demographic, epidemiologic, and cost data into an economic analysis of pneumococcal vaccination of infants in Latin America and the Caribbean. METHODS We previously used a structured literature review to develop regional estimates of the incidence of disease. Cost data were collected from physician interviews and public fee schedules. We then constructed a decision analytic model to compare pneumococcal conjugate vaccination of infants with no vaccination across this region, examining only vaccines direct effects on children. RESULTS Pneumococcal vaccination at the rate of diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis vaccine coverage was projected to prevent 9 500 deaths per year in children aged 0 to 5 years in the region, or approximately one life saved per 1 100 infants vaccinated. These saved lives as well as averted cases of deafness, motor deficit, and seizure result in 321 000 disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) being averted annually. At vaccine prices between US
Vaccine | 2010
Fernando de la Hoz; Nelson Alvis; J Narváez; natalia cediel; Oscar Gamboa; Martha Velandia
5 and US
Journal of Clinical Virology | 2005
Mauricio Beltrân; Maria-Cristina Navas; Fernando de la Hoz; Maria Mercedes Muñoz; Sergio Jaramillo; Cecilia Estrada; Lucía del Pilar Cortés; Maria Patricia Arbelâez; Jorge Donado; Gloria Eugenia Barco; Martha Luna; Gustavo Adolfo Uribe; Amalia de Maldonado; Juan Carlos Restrepo; Gonzalo Correa; Paula Borda; Gloria Rey; Marlen de Neira; Ángela Estrada; Sandra Yepes; Oscar Beltrân; Javier Pacheco; Iván Villegas; Jorge Boshell
53 per dose, the cost per DALY averted from a societal perspective would range from US
Vaccine | 2013
Eliana L. Parra; Fernando de la Hoz; Paula Lucía Díaz; Olga Sanabria; María Elena Realpe; Jaime Moreno
154 to US
Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2005
Fernando de la Hoz; Ligia Pérez; Jeremy G Wheeler; Marlen de Neira; Andrew J. Hall
5 252. CONCLUSION Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine was highly cost-effective up to
Revista de salud publica (Bogota, Colombia) | 2009
Carlos A Agudelo C; Fernando de la Hoz; Martha J. Mojica; Juan Carlos Eslava C; Rocío Robledo M; Patricia Cifuentes; A.N. Alvis Nelson
40 per dose. Introduction of pneumococcal vaccine in the Latin American and Caribbean region is projected to reduce childhood mortality and to be highly cost-effective across a range of possible costs.
Journal of Medical Entomology | 2009
Mauricio Rodríguez; Ligia Pérez; Juan Carlos Caicedo; Guillermo Prieto; José Antonio Arroyo; Harparkash Kaur; Martha Suárez-Mutis; Fernando de la Hoz; Jo Lines; Neal Alexander
A complete economic study was carried out to assess the economical impact of two rotavirus vaccine in Colombia. A Markov decision model was built to assess the health outcomes from birth to 24 months of age for three hypothetical cohorts: one unvaccinated, one vaccinated with 2 doses of Rotarix and the third, with 3 doses of Rotateq. Without vaccination, the annual number of medical visits by diarrhea in children under 2 years would be 1,293,159 cases, with 105,378 medical visits and 470 deaths (IC95% 295-560) related to rotavirus. Without vaccination, rotavirus disease would cost around USD