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Dive into the research topics where Stefan Flasche is active.

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Featured researches published by Stefan Flasche.


PLOS Medicine | 2011

Effect of pneumococcal conjugate vaccination on serotype-specific carriage and invasive disease in England: a cross-sectional study

Stefan Flasche; Albert Jan van Hoek; Elizabeth Sheasby; Pauline Waight; Nick Andrews; Carmen Sheppard; Robert George; Elizabeth Miller

A cross sectional study by Stefan Flasche and coworkers document the serotype replacement of Streptococcus pneumoniae that has occurred in England since the introduction of PCV7 vaccination.


Vaccine | 2010

Vaccination against pandemic influenza A/H1N1v in England: a real-time economic evaluation.

Marc Baguelin; Albert Jan van Hoek; Mark Jit; Stefan Flasche; Peter White; W. John Edmunds

Decisions on how to mitigate an evolving pandemic are technically challenging. We present a real-time assessment of the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of alternative influenza A/H1N1v vaccination strategies. A transmission dynamic model was fitted to the estimated number of cases in real-time, and used to generate plausible autumn scenarios under different vaccination options. The proportion of these cases by age and risk group leading to primary care consultations, National Pandemic Flu Service consultations, emergency attendances, hospitalisations, intensive care and death was then estimated using existing data from the pandemic. The real-time model suggests that the epidemic will peak in early November, with the peak height being similar in magnitude to the summer wave. Vaccination of the high-risk groups is estimated to prevent about 45 deaths (80% credibility interval 26-67), and save around 2900 QALYs (80% credibility interval 1600-4500). Such a programme is very likely to be cost-effective if the cost of vaccine purchase itself is treated as a sunk cost. Extending vaccination to low-risk individuals is expected to result in more modest gains in deaths and QALYs averted. Extending vaccination to school-age children would be the most cost-effective extension. The early availability of vaccines is crucial in determining the impact of such extensions. There have been a considerable number of cases of H1N1v in England, and so the benefits of vaccination to mitigate the ongoing autumn wave are limited. However, certain groups appear to be at significantly higher risk of complications and deaths, and so it appears both effective and cost-effective to vaccinate them. The United Kingdom was the first country to have a major epidemic in Europe. In countries where the epidemic is not so far advanced vaccination of children may be cost-effective. Similar, detailed, real-time modelling and economic studies could help to clarify the situation.


PLOS Currents | 2010

The Early Transmission Dynamics of H1N1pdm Influenza in the United Kingdom.

Azra C. Ghani; Marc Baquelin; Jamie T. Griffin; Stefan Flasche; Richard Pebody; Van Hoek Albert Jan; Simon Cauchemez; Ian Hall; Christl A. Donnelly; Chris Robertson; Michael T. White; Iain Barrass; Christophe Fraser; Alison Bermingham; James E. Truscott; Joanna Ellis; Helen E. Jenkins; George Kafatos; Tini Garske; Ross Harris; James McMenamin; Colin Hawkins; Nick Phin; Andre Charlett; Maria Zambon; W. John Edmunds; Mike Catchpole; Steve Leach; Peter White; Neil M. Ferguson

We analyzed data on all laboratory-confirmed cases of H1N1pdm influenza in the UK to 10th June 2009 to estimate epidemiological characteristics. We estimated a mean incubation period of 2.05 days and serial interval of 2.5 days with infectivity peaking close to onset of symptoms. Transmission was initially sporadic but increased from mid-May in England and from early June in Scotland. We estimated 37% of transmission occurred in schools, 24% in households, 28% through travel abroad and the remainder in the wider community. Children under 16 were more susceptible to infection in the household (adjusted OR 5.80, 95% CI 2.99-11.82). Treatment with oseltamivir plus widespread use of prophylaxis significantly reduced transmission (estimated reduction 16%). Households not receiving oseltamivir within 3 days of symptom onset in the index case had significantly increased secondary attack rates (adjusted OR 3.42, 95% CI 1.51-8.55).


PLOS Currents | 2015

Temporal Changes in Ebola Transmission in Sierra Leone and Implications for Control Requirements: a Real-time Modelling Study

Anton Camacho; Adam J. Kucharski; Yvonne Aki-Sawyerr; Mark A. White; Stefan Flasche; Marc Baguelin; Timothy Pollington; Julia R. Carney; Rebecca Glover; Elizabeth Smout; Amanda Tiffany; W. John Edmunds; Sebastian Funk

Background: Between August and November 2014, the incidence of Ebola virus disease (EVD) rose dramatically in several districts of Sierra Leone. As a result, the number of cases exceeded the capacity of Ebola holding and treatment centres. During December, additional beds were introduced, and incidence declined in many areas. We aimed to measure patterns of transmission in different regions, and evaluate whether bed capacity is now sufficient to meet future demand. Methods: We used a mathematical model of EVD infection to estimate how the extent of transmission in the nine worst affected districts of Sierra Leone changed between 10th August 2014 and 18th January 2015. Using the model, we forecast the number of cases that could occur until the end of March 2015, and compared bed requirements with expected future capacity. Results: We found that the reproduction number, R, defined as the average number of secondary cases generated by a typical infectious individual, declined between August and December in all districts. We estimated that R was near the crucial control threshold value of 1 in December. We further estimated that bed capacity has lagged behind demand between August and December for most districts, but as a consequence of the decline in transmission, control measures caught up with the epidemic in early 2015. Conclusions: EVD incidence has exhibited substantial temporal and geographical variation in Sierra Leone, but our results suggest that the epidemic may have now peaked in Sierra Leone, and that current bed capacity appears to be sufficient to keep the epidemic under-control in most districts.


The Lancet | 2016

Public health impact and cost-effectiveness of the RTS,S/AS01 malaria vaccine: a systematic comparison of predictions from four mathematical models

Melissa A. Penny; Robert Verity; Caitlin A. Bever; Christophe Sauboin; Katya Galactionova; Stefan Flasche; Michael T. White; Edward A. Wenger; Nicolas Van de Velde; Peter Pemberton-Ross; Jamie T. Griffin; Thomas Smith; Philip A. Eckhoff; Farzana Muhib; Mark Jit; Azra C. Ghani

Summary Background The phase 3 trial of the RTS,S/AS01 malaria vaccine candidate showed modest efficacy of the vaccine against Plasmodium falciparum malaria, but was not powered to assess mortality endpoints. Impact projections and cost-effectiveness estimates for longer timeframes than the trial follow-up and across a range of settings are needed to inform policy recommendations. We aimed to assess the public health impact and cost-effectiveness of routine use of the RTS,S/AS01 vaccine in African settings. Methods We compared four malaria transmission models and their predictions to assess vaccine cost-effectiveness and impact. We used trial data for follow-up of 32 months or longer to parameterise vaccine protection in the group aged 5–17 months. Estimates of cases, deaths, and disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) averted were calculated over a 15 year time horizon for a range of levels of Plasmodium falciparum parasite prevalence in 2–10 year olds (PfPR2–10; range 3–65%). We considered two vaccine schedules: three doses at ages 6, 7·5, and 9 months (three-dose schedule, 90% coverage) and including a fourth dose at age 27 months (four-dose schedule, 72% coverage). We estimated cost-effectiveness in the presence of existing malaria interventions for vaccine prices of US


PLOS Medicine | 2016

The Long-Term Safety, Public Health Impact, and Cost-Effectiveness of Routine Vaccination with a Recombinant, Live-Attenuated Dengue Vaccine (Dengvaxia): A Model Comparison Study.

Stefan Flasche; Mark Jit; Isabel Rodriguez-Barraquer; Laurent Coudeville; Mario Recker; Katia Koelle; George Milne; Thomas J. Hladish; T. Alex Perkins; Derek A. T. Cummings; Ilaria Dorigatti; Daniel J. Laydon; Guido Espana; Joel Kelso; Ira M. Longini; José Lourenço; Carl A. B. Pearson; Robert C. Reiner; Luis Mier-y-Teran-Romero; Kirsten Vannice; Neil M. Ferguson

2–10 per dose. Findings In regions with a PfPR2–10 of 10–65%, RTS,S/AS01 is predicted to avert a median of 93 940 (range 20 490–126 540) clinical cases and 394 (127–708) deaths for the three-dose schedule, or 116 480 (31 450–160 410) clinical cases and 484 (189–859) deaths for the four-dose schedule, per 100 000 fully vaccinated children. A positive impact is also predicted at a PfPR2–10 of 5–10%, but there is little impact at a prevalence of lower than 3%. At


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Measuring the impact of Ebola control measures in Sierra Leone.

Adam J. Kucharski; Anton Camacho; Stefan Flasche; Rebecca Glover; W. John Edmunds; Sebastian Funk

5 per dose and a PfPR2–10 of 10–65%, we estimated a median incremental cost-effectiveness ratio compared with current interventions of


PLOS ONE | 2012

Mathematical Modelling Long-Term Effects of Replacing Prevnar7 with Prevnar13 on Invasive Pneumococcal Diseases in England and Wales

Mark Jit; Stefan Flasche; Elizabeth Miller

30 (range 18–211) per clinical case averted and


PLOS ONE | 2014

Age-Dependent Prevalence of Nasopharyngeal Carriage of Streptococcus pneumoniae before Conjugate Vaccine Introduction: A Prediction Model Based on a Meta-Analysis.

Olivier le Polain de Waroux; Stefan Flasche; David Prieto-Merino; W. John Edmunds

80 (44–279) per DALY averted for the three-dose schedule, and of


Epidemics | 2011

Different transmission patterns in the early stages of the influenza A(H1N1) v pandemic: A comparative analysis of 12 European countries

Stefan Flasche; Niel Hens; Pierre-Yves Boëlle; Joël Mossong; W. Marijn van Ballegooijen; Baltazar Nunes; Caterina Rizzo; Florin Popovici; Patricia Santa-Olalla; Frantiska Hrubá; Kremena Parmakova; Marc Baguelin; Albert Jan van Hoek; Jean-Claude Desenclos; Pascale Bernillon; Amparro Larrauri Cámara; Jacco Wallinga; Tommi Asikainen; Peter White; W. John Edmunds

25 (16–222) and

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David Goldblatt

University College London

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Mark Jit

Johns Hopkins University

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