Planning for monitoring the introduction and effectiveness of new vaccines using real-word data and geospatial visualization: An example using rotavirus vaccines with potential application to SARS-CoV-2

Background: Infectious diseases continue to cause significant impact on human health. Vaccines are instrumental in preventing infectious diseases and mitigating pandemics and epidemics. SARS-CoV-2 is the most recent example of an urgent pandemic that requires the development of vaccines. This study...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: T. Christopher Mast, David Heyman, Erik Dasbach, Craig Roberts, Michelle G. Goveia, Lyn Finelli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-04-01
Series:Vaccine: X
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590136221000012
id doaj-ef7a4a5368e149009e3637b3252d9f5c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ef7a4a5368e149009e3637b3252d9f5c2021-04-08T04:20:50ZengElsevierVaccine: X2590-13622021-04-017100084Planning for monitoring the introduction and effectiveness of new vaccines using real-word data and geospatial visualization: An example using rotavirus vaccines with potential application to SARS-CoV-2T. Christopher Mast0David Heyman1Erik Dasbach2Craig Roberts3Michelle G. Goveia4Lyn Finelli5Merck & Co., Inc., Kenilworth, NJ, USA; Corresponding author at: Center for Observational and Real-World Evidence, Merck & Co., Inc., Mailstop WP37A-150, 770 Sumneytown Pike, West Point, PA 19486, USA.Axis Maps, Hewitt, TX, USAMerck & Co., Inc., Kenilworth, NJ, USAMerck & Co., Inc., Kenilworth, NJ, USAMerck & Co., Inc., Kenilworth, NJ, USAMerck & Co., Inc., Kenilworth, NJ, USABackground: Infectious diseases continue to cause significant impact on human health. Vaccines are instrumental in preventing infectious diseases and mitigating pandemics and epidemics. SARS-CoV-2 is the most recent example of an urgent pandemic that requires the development of vaccines. This study combined real-world data and geospatial visualization techniques to demonstrate methods to monitor and communicate the uptake and impact of existing and new vaccines. Methods: Observational data of existing pediatric rotavirus vaccines were used as an example. A large US national insurance claims database was accessed to build an analytic dataset for a 20-year period (1996–2017). For each week and multiple geographic scales, animated spatial and non-spatial visualization techniques were applied to demonstrate changes in seasonal rotavirus epidemic curves and population-based disease rates before, during, and after vaccine introduction in 2006. The geographic scales included national, state, county and zip code tabulation areas. An online web-based digital atlas was built to display either continuous or snapshot visualizations of disease patterns, vaccine uptake, and improved health outcomes after vaccination (http://www.mapvaccines.com). Results: Over 17 million zip code-weeks of data were available for analysis. The animations show geospatial patterns of rotavirus-related medical encounter rates peaking every year from November – February prior to vaccine availability in 2006. Visualizations showed increasing vaccination coverage rates at all geographic scales over time. Declines in medical encounter rates accelerated as vaccination coverage rapidly increased after 2010. The data maps also identified geographic hotspots with low vaccination rates and persistent disease rates. Conclusion: This project developed novel web-based methods to communicate location and time-based vaccine uptake and the related reduction in medical visits due to viral infection. Future applications of the visualization could be used by health agencies to monitor known or novel disease patterns over time in conjunction with close assessment of current and future vaccine utilization.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590136221000012VisualizationGeospatialVaccinesRotavirusSARS-CoV-2Surveillance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author T. Christopher Mast
David Heyman
Erik Dasbach
Craig Roberts
Michelle G. Goveia
Lyn Finelli
spellingShingle T. Christopher Mast
David Heyman
Erik Dasbach
Craig Roberts
Michelle G. Goveia
Lyn Finelli
Planning for monitoring the introduction and effectiveness of new vaccines using real-word data and geospatial visualization: An example using rotavirus vaccines with potential application to SARS-CoV-2
Vaccine: X
Visualization
Geospatial
Vaccines
Rotavirus
SARS-CoV-2
Surveillance
author_facet T. Christopher Mast
David Heyman
Erik Dasbach
Craig Roberts
Michelle G. Goveia
Lyn Finelli
author_sort T. Christopher Mast
title Planning for monitoring the introduction and effectiveness of new vaccines using real-word data and geospatial visualization: An example using rotavirus vaccines with potential application to SARS-CoV-2
title_short Planning for monitoring the introduction and effectiveness of new vaccines using real-word data and geospatial visualization: An example using rotavirus vaccines with potential application to SARS-CoV-2
title_full Planning for monitoring the introduction and effectiveness of new vaccines using real-word data and geospatial visualization: An example using rotavirus vaccines with potential application to SARS-CoV-2
title_fullStr Planning for monitoring the introduction and effectiveness of new vaccines using real-word data and geospatial visualization: An example using rotavirus vaccines with potential application to SARS-CoV-2
title_full_unstemmed Planning for monitoring the introduction and effectiveness of new vaccines using real-word data and geospatial visualization: An example using rotavirus vaccines with potential application to SARS-CoV-2
title_sort planning for monitoring the introduction and effectiveness of new vaccines using real-word data and geospatial visualization: an example using rotavirus vaccines with potential application to sars-cov-2
publisher Elsevier
series Vaccine: X
issn 2590-1362
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Background: Infectious diseases continue to cause significant impact on human health. Vaccines are instrumental in preventing infectious diseases and mitigating pandemics and epidemics. SARS-CoV-2 is the most recent example of an urgent pandemic that requires the development of vaccines. This study combined real-world data and geospatial visualization techniques to demonstrate methods to monitor and communicate the uptake and impact of existing and new vaccines. Methods: Observational data of existing pediatric rotavirus vaccines were used as an example. A large US national insurance claims database was accessed to build an analytic dataset for a 20-year period (1996–2017). For each week and multiple geographic scales, animated spatial and non-spatial visualization techniques were applied to demonstrate changes in seasonal rotavirus epidemic curves and population-based disease rates before, during, and after vaccine introduction in 2006. The geographic scales included national, state, county and zip code tabulation areas. An online web-based digital atlas was built to display either continuous or snapshot visualizations of disease patterns, vaccine uptake, and improved health outcomes after vaccination (http://www.mapvaccines.com). Results: Over 17 million zip code-weeks of data were available for analysis. The animations show geospatial patterns of rotavirus-related medical encounter rates peaking every year from November – February prior to vaccine availability in 2006. Visualizations showed increasing vaccination coverage rates at all geographic scales over time. Declines in medical encounter rates accelerated as vaccination coverage rapidly increased after 2010. The data maps also identified geographic hotspots with low vaccination rates and persistent disease rates. Conclusion: This project developed novel web-based methods to communicate location and time-based vaccine uptake and the related reduction in medical visits due to viral infection. Future applications of the visualization could be used by health agencies to monitor known or novel disease patterns over time in conjunction with close assessment of current and future vaccine utilization.
topic Visualization
Geospatial
Vaccines
Rotavirus
SARS-CoV-2
Surveillance
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590136221000012
work_keys_str_mv AT tchristophermast planningformonitoringtheintroductionandeffectivenessofnewvaccinesusingrealworddataandgeospatialvisualizationanexampleusingrotavirusvaccineswithpotentialapplicationtosarscov2
AT davidheyman planningformonitoringtheintroductionandeffectivenessofnewvaccinesusingrealworddataandgeospatialvisualizationanexampleusingrotavirusvaccineswithpotentialapplicationtosarscov2
AT erikdasbach planningformonitoringtheintroductionandeffectivenessofnewvaccinesusingrealworddataandgeospatialvisualizationanexampleusingrotavirusvaccineswithpotentialapplicationtosarscov2
AT craigroberts planningformonitoringtheintroductionandeffectivenessofnewvaccinesusingrealworddataandgeospatialvisualizationanexampleusingrotavirusvaccineswithpotentialapplicationtosarscov2
AT michelleggoveia planningformonitoringtheintroductionandeffectivenessofnewvaccinesusingrealworddataandgeospatialvisualizationanexampleusingrotavirusvaccineswithpotentialapplicationtosarscov2
AT lynfinelli planningformonitoringtheintroductionandeffectivenessofnewvaccinesusingrealworddataandgeospatialvisualizationanexampleusingrotavirusvaccineswithpotentialapplicationtosarscov2
_version_ 1721535453404856320