Qdenga Vaccine Offers Hope Against Dengue Burden

Why in the News ?

India has cleared Qdenga (TAK-003), its first dengue vaccine, for individuals aged 4–60 years. This marks a major step in tackling dengue burden, though experts caution that it reduces disease severity, not transmission, requiring continued public health efforts.

Significance and Benefits of Dengue Vaccine:

  • Qdenga (TAK-003), developed by Takeda, is a tetravalent vaccine targeting all four dengue serotypes (DENV-1 to DENV-4).
  • Approved after large global trials (28,000+ participants) and already used in 40+ countries.
  • Provides strong protection against severe dengue and hospitalisation, which are key public health concerns.
  • Does not require pre-vaccination screening, making it easier to deploy in large populations.
  • Marks a shift from reactive vector control to a more preventive vaccination approach in India.

Limitations and Challenges

  • Vaccine does not prevent infection, but only reduces disease severity—outbreaks may still continue.
  • Uneven efficacy: strong against DENV-2, moderate for DENV-1, but weaker against DENV-3 and DENV-4.
  • Rising prevalence of DENV-3 in India may reduce overall effectiveness at the population level.
  • Requires two doses (3 months apart), affecting compliance.
  • High cost (₹3,000–6,000 per dose) raises concerns about affordability and access, especially in rural areas.
Key points: Dengue and Public Health in India
●  Dengue is a vector-borne viral disease transmitted by Aedes mosquitoes.●  Caused by four serotypes (DENV-1 to DENV-4); infection with one does not ensure immunity against others.
●  Severe dengue risk increases due to Antibody-Dependent Enhancement (ADE) in secondary infections.
●  India relies on vector control measures: eliminating breeding sites, insecticides, and awareness campaigns.
●  All four serotypes co-circulate in India, with DENV-2 dominant and DENV-3 rising.
●  Indigenous vaccine “DengiAll” (Panacea Biotec + ICMR) is under Phase III trials, and may be available by 2027.

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