Moderate influenza vaccine effectiveness with variable effectiveness by match between circulating and vaccine strains in Australian adults aged 20-64 years, 2007-2011
- PMID: 23078073
- PMCID: PMC5781205
- DOI: 10.1111/irv.12018
Moderate influenza vaccine effectiveness with variable effectiveness by match between circulating and vaccine strains in Australian adults aged 20-64 years, 2007-2011
Abstract
Background: Influenza vaccines are licensed annually based on immunogenicity studies. We used five sequential years of data to estimate influenza vaccine effectiveness (VE), the critical outcome in the field.
Methods: Between 2007 and 2011, we performed annual prospective test-negative design case-control studies among adults aged 20-64 years recruited from sentinel general practices in the Australian state of Victoria. We used PCR-confirmed influenza as the endpoint to estimate influenza VE for all years. We compared annual VE estimates with the match between circulating and vaccine strains, determined by haemagglutination inhibition assays.
Results: The adjusted VE estimate for all years (excluding 2009) was 62% (95% CI 43, 75). By type and subtype, the point estimates of VE by year ranged between 31% for seasonal influenza A(H1N1) and 88% for influenza A(H1N1)pdm09. In 2007, when circulating strains were assessed as incompletely matched, the point estimate of the adjusted VE against all influenza was 58%. The point estimate was 59% in 2011 when all strains were assessed as well matched.
Conclusion: Trivalent inactivated vaccines provided moderate protection against laboratory-confirmed influenza in adults of working age, although VE estimates were sensitive to the model used. VE estimates correlated poorly with circulating strain match, as assessed by haemagglutination inhibition assays, suggesting a need for VE studies that incorporate antigenic characterization data.
Keywords: influenza; influenza vaccine; influenza-like illness; vaccine effectiveness.
© 2012 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Figures
References
-
- Barr IG, McCauley J, Cox N et al. Epidemiological, antigenic and genetic characteristics of seasonal influenza A(H1N1), A(H3N2) and B influenza viruses: basis for the WHO recommendation on the composition of influenza vaccines for use in the 2009–2010 Northern Hemisphere season. Vaccine 2009; 28:1156–1167. - PubMed
-
- Last J, Porta M. A Dictionary of Epidemiology, 5th edn New York, USA: Oxford University Press, 2008.
-
- Kelly H, Barr I. Large trials confirm immunogenicity of H1N1 vaccines. Lancet 2009; 375:6–9. - PubMed
-
- Belongia EA, Kieke BA, Donahue JG et al. Effectiveness of inactivated influenza vaccines varied substantially with antigenic match from the 2004–2005 season to the 2006–2007 season. J Infect Dis 2009; 199:159–167. - PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical