| Literature DB >> 20092638 |
Jaime L Rubin1, Lisa J McGarry, Keith P Klugman, David R Strutton, Kristen E Gilmore, Milton C Weinstein.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Influenza pandemic outbreaks occurred in the US in 1918, 1957, and 1968. Historical evidence suggests that the majority of influenza-related deaths during the 1918 US pandemic were attributable to bacterial pneumococcal infections. The 2009 novel influenza A (H1N1) outbreak highlights the importance of interventions that may mitigate the impact of a pandemic.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20092638 PMCID: PMC2823614 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-10-14
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Figure 1Decision model structure. In each age group, persons could be vaccinated or unvaccinated, depending on vaccination policy and coverage (node 2). Both vaccinated and unvaccinated persons are at risk of influenza (node 3) and may or may not receive treatment for this condition (node 4). Pneumococcal disease sub tree. In the model, persons are first subject to the risk of meningitis (node 5), which can lead to death (node 6) or to deafness, disability, or no sequelae (node 7). Those not experiencing meningitis are subject to the risk of bacteremia (node 8), including bacteremic pneumonia, which may lead to death (node 9). Similarly, persons who do not contract meningitis or bacteremia are then at risk for non-bacteremic pneumonia (node 10) and AOM (node 11), and they can die of pneumonia (nodes 12). Persons may also die of causes unrelated to pneumococcal disease; these deaths are incorporated into the event-specific mortality probabilities (at nodes 6, 9, 12, and 14), and are captured separately for those who avoid acute pneumococcal events (node 13).
Input parameters
| Age group (years) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 - <2 | 2 - 4 | 5 - 17 | 18 - 49 | 50 - 64 | 65+ | |
| Pneumococcal meningitis/a | 9.1 | 1.1 | 2.3 | 0.5 | 1.5 | 1.7 |
| Pneumococcal bacteremia/a | 174.8 | 35.8 | 3.8 | 12.3 | 22.7 | 58.8 |
| All-cause pneumonia/b | 4,710 | 1,517 | 329 | 383 | 1,462 | 9,294 |
| All-cause otitis media (per person)/c | 1.10 | 0.58 | ||||
| Pneumococcal meningitis/d | 0.05 | 0.05 | 0.04 | 0.13 | 0.21 | 0.27 |
| Pneumococcal bacteremia/d | 0.01 | 0.01 | 0.02 | 0.08 | 0.12 | 0.16 |
| All-cause pneumonia/e | 0.00 | 0.02 | 0.02 | 0.02 | 0.05 | 0.05 |
| Deafness/f | 13.0 | 13.0 | 6.4 | 13.0 | 13.0 | 13.0 |
| Disability/f | 6.7 | 6.7 | 5.2 | 6.7 | 6.7 | 6.7 |
| IPD | ||||||
| Efficacy/g | 73.5% | 67.0% | ||||
| Indirect (herd) effect/h | 46.8% | 40.3% | 17.5% | 38.3% | 17.4% | 33.6% |
| All-cause pneumonia | ||||||
| Efficacy/i | 6.9% | 6.3% | ||||
| Indirect (herd) effect/j | 17.6% | 18.9% | 9.0% | 13.0% | 9.3% | 7.7% |
| All-cause otitis media | ||||||
| Efficacy/i | 6.4% | 5.8% | ||||
| Indirect (herd) effect/k | 20.1% | 19.0% | ||||
| Meningitis/l | 13,196 | 13,196 | 7,446 | 10,586 | 13,461 | 10,263 |
| Deafness/m | 101,975 | 101,387 | 97,679 | 82,278 | 57,428 | 31,733 |
| Disability/m | 526,174 | 523,143 | 504,006 | 424,543 | 296,317 | 163,738 |
| Bacteremia/l | 2,754 | 2,754 | 7,446 | 10,586 | 13,461 | 10,263 |
| Pneumonia/n | 592 | 592 | 5,166 | 6,465 | 7,558 | 7,263 |
| Otitis media/o | 256 | 256 | ||||
Indirect (herd) effect refers to percent reduction in disease incidence in the unvaccinated
IPD = invasive pneumococcal disease
a. Incidence of pneumococcal meningitis and bacteremia were estimated from the published ABCs report [15]. The ABCs reports incidence for 18-34 and 35-49 year old persons separately; we combined these age groups using weighted averages based on census data.
b. Incidence rates for all-cause pneumonia were adapted from Ray et al., which used unpublished Kaiser Permanente data to estimate incidence in unvaccinated populations [21,26].
c. Incidence of AOM adapted from Ray et al., combining simple and complex AOM. Only children <5 years were assumed to be at risk for AOM [21].
d. Case-fatality rates for IPD were estimated from the published ABCs report [14,15] and Robinson et al. [33]; we divided the incidence reported in the ABCs by the age-specific mortality reported by Robinson et al.
e. Case-fatality rates for pneumonia were estimated from a study of community-acquired pneumonia [31]. It was assumed that there was no risk of death from AOM.
f. The probabilities of deafness and disability due to meningitis were adapted from data in children and adolescents with bacterial meningitis [22,27-29].
g. Adapted from the NCKP trial of PCV7 [23]; 94% (intent-to-treat) efficacy against covered serotypes, with PCV7 coverage of approximately 80% against S.pneumoniae serotypes that cause pneumococcal meningitis and bacteremia.
h. In children <5 estimated as the difference between observed changes in disease incidence from the (ABCs) Report and direct vaccine efficacy from the NCKP trial, assuming all changes in incidence not attributable to vaccine efficacy were attributable to indirect (herd) effects [14,15,23]; in adults estimated based changes in incidence reported in the ABCs report.
i. Based on intent-to-treat data from the NCKP trial for PCV7 [23].
j. In children < 5, estimated from assuming overall effectiveness is the midpoint between the NCKP trial data, which reported vaccine efficacy of 6.9% in all-cause pneumonia [26] and ecologic data reported by Grijalva (39% reduction) [18] and assuming all reductions in disease not attributable to vaccine efficacy are attributable to indirect (herd) effects. We chose the midpoint because it is not known what proportion of the reduction in admissions reported by Grijalva were due to the direct effects of PCV7 versus indirect (herd) effects within the vaccine-eligible population, and these ecological data reflect changes in hospital admissions for pneumonia rather than incidence; final estimates of indirect (herd) effects against pneumonia were similar in magnitude to the reduction in x-ray confirmed pneumonia from the trial [33,34]. In adults, indirect (herd) effects against pneumonia were estimated from ecologic data reported by Grijalva et al. [18].
k. Efficacy against AOM was calculated in a manner similar to that of pneumonia; we used the midpoint between the NCKP trial estimate (6.4%) [23] and results from a study that examined changes in AOM-related outpatient visits before and after the introduction of PCV7 (42.7% reduction) [32]; our assumption of the estimated proportion of the reduction in AOM cases that is biologically plausible to be attributable to PCV7 was based on expert opinion (personal communication with Keith Klugman, MD, PHD, Steve Pelton, MD, and Michael E. Pichichero, MD).
l. The cost of diagnosing and treating meningitis and bacteremia, were derived from Ray et al. [21,22]. Because this study did not report costs of meningitis and bacteremia separately for persons >5 years of age, we assigned the reported cost to both meningitis and bacteremia in these age groups.
m. Costs of long-term consequences of meningitis were adapted from lifetime costs of deafness and disability for children <5 years [21]. To calculate the lifetime costs in persons aged >5 years, we multiplied the costs for children <5 years by the proportional difference in discounted life-expectancy as estimated from US life-tables [45].
n. We combined costs of hospitalized pneumonia for persons >5 years of age [21] and non-hospitalized community-acquired pneumonia [45] to calculate the overall cost of all-cause pneumonia, assuming hospitalization rates of 12% for those aged 5 to 17 years, 28% for 18- to 49-year-olds, 25% for those aged >50 [18,21,47].
o. We assumed that 7% of AOM cases are complex and 1.4% of cases required tympanostomy tube placement [22], and estimated the cost of simple AOM as $192, complex AOM as $557, and tympanostomy tube placement as $2,687 [21]. The reported cost is a weighted average of simple and complex AOM and cases requiring tube placement.
Incidence in pandemic and non-pandemic years
| Age group (years) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Annual Incidence of PD per 100,000 | 0 - <2 | 2 - 4 | 5 - 17 | 18 - 49 | 50 - 64 | 65+ |
| Among persons without influenza | ||||||
| Bacteremic pneumonia | 173.0 | 35.4 | 3.7 | 12.1 | 22.5 | 58.2 |
| Other pneumonia | 4,662 | 1,501 | 326 | 379 | 1,447 | 9,200 |
| Among persons with influenza | ||||||
| Bacteremic pneumonia | 186.3 | 38.1 | 4.0 | 13.1 | 24.2 | 62.6 |
| Other pneumonia | 5,020 | 1,616 | 351 | 408 | 1,558 | 9,906 |
| Among persons with influenza/a | ||||||
| Bacteremic pneumonia | 2,898 | 1,688 | 600 | 1,192 | 1,056 | 4,166 |
| Other pneumonia | 6,954 | 4,006 | 1,409 | 2,814 | 2,491 | 10,143 |
PD = pneumococcal disease
a. The incidence of PD among persons without influenza during a pandemic is assumed to be the same as in a non-pandemic year
Base-case and sensitivity analysis results
| Analysis | Values | Cases avoided | Deaths averted | Cost (savings) in billions of $ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Re-calibrated using current non-pandemic incidence distribution by age | -- | 4,430,000 | 73,100 | (4.8) |
| Incidence and case-fatality of bacteremic pneumonia - reduced by 50% | -- | 3,873,000 | 39,600 | (4.09) |
| Case-fatality rates for IPD and pneumonia - increased to 20% | -- | 201,000 | (7.33) | |
| Herd effect on pneumonia | ||||
| Low (0%) | 0% | 4,106,000 | 59,600 | (5.61) |
| High16 | 15% - 26% | 5,345,000 | 157,300 | (9.07) |
| Incidence of IPD (per 100,000) | ||||
| Low (-10%) | 296 - 8,365 | 4,689,000 | 102,700 | (6.77) |
| High (+10%) | 383 - 10,224 | 4,763,000 | 114,200 | (7.90) |
| Incidence of all-cause pneumonia (per 100,000) | ||||
| Low (-10%) | 5 - 165 | 4,681,000 | 103,700 | (7.17) |
| High (+10%) | 7 - 202 | 4,770,000 | 113,300 | (7.50) |
| Vaccine effectiveness on AOM (<2 Yr) | ||||
| Low21 | 6% | 2,687,000 | -- | (6.81) |
| High27 | 42% | 10,444,000 | -- | (8.80) |
| Vaccine coverage (<2) | ||||
| Low (-10%) | 78% | 4,661,000 | 107,900 | (7.40) |
| High (+10%) | 96% | 4,790,000 | 109,000 | (7.27) |
| Price of vaccine | ||||
| Low (-10%) | $68.78 | -- | -- | (7.44) |
| High (+10%) | $84.06 | -- | -- | (7.24) |
| Influenza treatment | ||||
| Low (-10%) | 8% - 16% | 4,728,000 | -- | (7.34) |
| High (+10%) | 14% - 26% | 4,725,000 | -- | (7.34) |
| Case-fatality from IPD | ||||
| Low (-10%) | 0.8% - 25% | -- | 102,400 | -- |
| High (+10%) | 0.9% - 30% | -- | 114,500 | -- |
| Case-fatality from all-cause pneumonia | ||||
| Low (-10%) | 0.4% - 4.7% | -- | 103,700 | -- |
| High (+10%) | 0.5% - 6% | -- | 113,300 | -- |
IPD = invasive pneumococcal disease; AOM = acute otitis media