Is the impact of childhood influenza vaccination less than expected: a transmission modelling study

Abstract Background To reduce the burden of severe influenza, most industrialized countries target specific risk-groups with influenza vaccines, e.g. the elderly or individuals with comorbidities. Since children are the main spreaders, some countries have recently implemented childhood vaccination p...

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Main Authors: Felix Weidemann, Cornelius Remschmidt, Silke Buda, Udo Buchholz, Bernhard Ultsch, Ole Wichmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-04-01
Series:BMC Infectious Diseases
Subjects:
NNV
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12879-017-2344-6
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spelling doaj-c2a93a00f3f24c3a9d2af7f2683c78f02020-11-25T03:40:11ZengBMCBMC Infectious Diseases1471-23342017-04-0117111410.1186/s12879-017-2344-6Is the impact of childhood influenza vaccination less than expected: a transmission modelling studyFelix Weidemann0Cornelius Remschmidt1Silke Buda2Udo Buchholz3Bernhard Ultsch4Ole Wichmann5Immunization Unit, Robert Koch-InstituteImmunization Unit, Robert Koch-InstituteRespiratory Disease Unit, Robert Koch-InstituteRespiratory Disease Unit, Robert Koch-InstituteImmunization Unit, Robert Koch-InstituteImmunization Unit, Robert Koch-InstituteAbstract Background To reduce the burden of severe influenza, most industrialized countries target specific risk-groups with influenza vaccines, e.g. the elderly or individuals with comorbidities. Since children are the main spreaders, some countries have recently implemented childhood vaccination programs to reduce overall virus transmission and thereby influenza disease in the whole population. The introduction of childhood vaccination programs was often supported by modelling studies that predicted substantial incidence reductions. We developed a mathematical transmission model to examine the potential impact of childhood influenza vaccination in Germany, while also challenging established modelling assumptions. Methods We developed an age-stratified SEIR-type transmission model to reproduce the epidemic influenza seasons between 2003/04 and 2013/14. The model was built upon German population counts, contact patterns, and vaccination history and was fitted to seasonal data on influenza-attributable medically attended acute respiratory infections (I-MAARI) and strain distribution using Bayesian methods. As novelties we (i) implemented a stratified model structure enabling seasonal variability and (ii) deviated from the commonly assumed mass-action-principle by employing a phenomenological transmission rate. Results According to the model, by vaccinating primarily the elderly over ten seasons 4 million (95% prediction interval: 3.84 – 4.19) I-MAARI were prevented which corresponds to an 8.6% (8.3% – 8.9%) reduction compared to a no-vaccination scenario and a number-needed-to-vaccinate (NNV) to prevent one I-MAARI of 37.1 (35.5 – 38.7). Additional vaccination of 2-10 year-old children at 40% coverage would have led to an overall I-MAARI reduction of 17.8% (17.1 – 18.7%) mostly due to indirect effects with a NNV of 20.7 (19.6 – 21.6). When employing the traditional mass-action-principle, the model predicted a more than 3-fold higher I-MAARI reduction (55.6%) due to childhood vaccination. Conclusion In Germany, the introduction of routine childhood influenza vaccination could considerably reduce I-MAARI among all age-groups and improve the NNV. However, the predicted impact is much lower compared to previous studies, which is primarily caused by our phenomenological approach to modelling influenza virus transmission.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12879-017-2344-6Influenzachildhood vaccinationtransmission modelNNVBayesian inference
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Felix Weidemann
Cornelius Remschmidt
Silke Buda
Udo Buchholz
Bernhard Ultsch
Ole Wichmann
spellingShingle Felix Weidemann
Cornelius Remschmidt
Silke Buda
Udo Buchholz
Bernhard Ultsch
Ole Wichmann
Is the impact of childhood influenza vaccination less than expected: a transmission modelling study
BMC Infectious Diseases
Influenza
childhood vaccination
transmission model
NNV
Bayesian inference
author_facet Felix Weidemann
Cornelius Remschmidt
Silke Buda
Udo Buchholz
Bernhard Ultsch
Ole Wichmann
author_sort Felix Weidemann
title Is the impact of childhood influenza vaccination less than expected: a transmission modelling study
title_short Is the impact of childhood influenza vaccination less than expected: a transmission modelling study
title_full Is the impact of childhood influenza vaccination less than expected: a transmission modelling study
title_fullStr Is the impact of childhood influenza vaccination less than expected: a transmission modelling study
title_full_unstemmed Is the impact of childhood influenza vaccination less than expected: a transmission modelling study
title_sort is the impact of childhood influenza vaccination less than expected: a transmission modelling study
publisher BMC
series BMC Infectious Diseases
issn 1471-2334
publishDate 2017-04-01
description Abstract Background To reduce the burden of severe influenza, most industrialized countries target specific risk-groups with influenza vaccines, e.g. the elderly or individuals with comorbidities. Since children are the main spreaders, some countries have recently implemented childhood vaccination programs to reduce overall virus transmission and thereby influenza disease in the whole population. The introduction of childhood vaccination programs was often supported by modelling studies that predicted substantial incidence reductions. We developed a mathematical transmission model to examine the potential impact of childhood influenza vaccination in Germany, while also challenging established modelling assumptions. Methods We developed an age-stratified SEIR-type transmission model to reproduce the epidemic influenza seasons between 2003/04 and 2013/14. The model was built upon German population counts, contact patterns, and vaccination history and was fitted to seasonal data on influenza-attributable medically attended acute respiratory infections (I-MAARI) and strain distribution using Bayesian methods. As novelties we (i) implemented a stratified model structure enabling seasonal variability and (ii) deviated from the commonly assumed mass-action-principle by employing a phenomenological transmission rate. Results According to the model, by vaccinating primarily the elderly over ten seasons 4 million (95% prediction interval: 3.84 – 4.19) I-MAARI were prevented which corresponds to an 8.6% (8.3% – 8.9%) reduction compared to a no-vaccination scenario and a number-needed-to-vaccinate (NNV) to prevent one I-MAARI of 37.1 (35.5 – 38.7). Additional vaccination of 2-10 year-old children at 40% coverage would have led to an overall I-MAARI reduction of 17.8% (17.1 – 18.7%) mostly due to indirect effects with a NNV of 20.7 (19.6 – 21.6). When employing the traditional mass-action-principle, the model predicted a more than 3-fold higher I-MAARI reduction (55.6%) due to childhood vaccination. Conclusion In Germany, the introduction of routine childhood influenza vaccination could considerably reduce I-MAARI among all age-groups and improve the NNV. However, the predicted impact is much lower compared to previous studies, which is primarily caused by our phenomenological approach to modelling influenza virus transmission.
topic Influenza
childhood vaccination
transmission model
NNV
Bayesian inference
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12879-017-2344-6
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