Imperfect vaccines and the evolution of pathogen virulence
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Abstract
Vaccines rarely provide full protection from disease. Nevertheless,
partially effective (imperfect) vaccines may be used to protect
both individuals and whole populations.We studied the potential
impact of different types of imperfect vaccines on the evolution
of pathogen virulence (induced host mortality) and the
consequences for public health. Here we show that vaccines
designed to reduce pathogen growth rate and/or toxicity diminish
selection against virulent pathogens. The subsequent evolution
leads to higher levels of intrinsic virulence and hence to more
severe disease in unvaccinated individuals. This evolution can
erode any population-wide benefits such that overall mortality
rates are unaffected, or even increase, with the level of vaccination
coverage. In contrast, infection-blocking vaccines induce no such
effects, and can even select for lower virulence. These findings
have policy implications for the development and use of vaccines
that are not expected to provide full immunity, such as candidate
vaccines for malaria.
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