| Literature DB >> 24993051 |
Martin Eichner1, Markus Schwehm, Johannes Hain, Helmut Uphoff, Bernd Salzberger, Markus Knuf, Ruprecht Schmidt-Ott.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Influenza vaccines contain Influenza A and B antigens and are adjusted annually to match the characteristics of circulating viruses. In Germany, Influenza B viruses belonged to the B/Yamagata lineage, but since 2001, the antigenically distinct B/Victoria lineage has been co-circulating. Trivalent influenza vaccines (TIV) contain antigens of the two A subtypes A(H3N2) and A(H1N1), yet of only one B lineage, resulting in frequent vaccine mismatches. Since 2012, the WHO has been recommending vaccine strains from both B lineages, paving the way for quadrivalent influenza vaccines (QIV).Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24993051 PMCID: PMC4099094 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-14-365
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Figure 1Transmission and immunity dynamics in the simulations: black arrows indicate births and disease progression, red solid arrows indicate infections, green arrows indicate successful vaccinations, and grey arrows show loss of immunity; dotted red arrows indicate cross-immunization against a B lineage caused by an infection or vaccination with the other B lineage; vaccinations and infections can also booster existing immunity (indicated by a “+”); arrows for deaths (which drain each single compartment) were omitted.
List of parameters and baseline values
| Basic reproduction number | 1.575 | Calibration |
| Maximum seasonal transmission factor | 1.43 | [ |
| Day of maximum seasonal transmission | Dec. 21st | [ |
| Duration of the latent period | 2 days | [ |
| External infection probability | 0.0003/year | Assumed |
| Duration of the infectious period | | [ |
| - children (age 0–17 years) | 4 days | |
| - adults (age 18 years and above) | 2 days | |
| Duration of maternal protection | 2 - 4 months | [ |
| Immunity loss rate after infection (irrespective of influenza subtype or lineage) | 1/(9.13 years) | Calculated from [ |
| Average circulation time per drift variant | | Calculated from [ |
| - A(H1N1), B/Vic, B/Yam | 7.0 years | |
| - A(H3N2) | 3.5 years | |
| Vaccination coverage | | [ |
| - no risk group, 0.5-2 years of age | 19.2% | |
| - no risk group, 3–6 years of age | 22.4% | |
| - no risk group, 7–10 years of age | 23.6% | |
| - no risk group, 11–15 years of age | 11.0% | |
| - no risk group, 16–59 years of age | 16.9% | |
| - no risk group, 60 years of age or older | 48.8% | |
| - risk group, 0.5-59 years of age | 33.0% | |
| - risk group, 60 years of age or older | 64.9% | |
| Revaccination preference factor | 2 | Assumed |
| Probability of mismatched vaccine design when a new drift variant occurs | 40% | Calculated from [ |
| Vaccine efficacy (well-matched vaccine; irrespective of influenza subtype or lineage) | | |
| - 0–1 year of age | 45% | [ |
| - 2–5 years of age | 39% | [ |
| - 6–15 years of age | 69% | [ |
| - 16–64 years of age | 73% | [ |
| - 65 years of age or older | 58% | [ |
| Cross protection after infection | | Calculated from [ |
| - percentage of individuals who are immunized against a B lineage when they are infected (or booster-infected) with the other B lineage (lineage cross protection) | 60% | |
| - percentage of individuals who were immune against the previous drift variant, who are still protected against the new one (drift cross protection) | 60% | |
| Cross protection after vaccination | | Calculated from [ |
| - vaccine efficacy multiplication factor for B lineage not contained in TIV (lineage cross protection) | 0.6 | |
| - vaccine efficacy multiplication factor for vaccinations with drift mismatch (drift cross protection) | 0.6 | |
| Immunity loss rate after vaccination | 1/(1.8 years) | Calculated from [ |
| Percentage of the population with elevated risk | | [ |
| - newborn individuals | 3.0% | |
| - age 0 to 15 years | 6.0% | |
| - age 16 to 59 years | 14.2% | |
| - age 60 years and above | 47.1% |
Figure 2Visualization of the contact structure in the simulated population; the number of contacts decreases from red over yellow, green, light blue to dark blue. (a) POLYMOD contact structure before initialization of the contact network. (b) Contact network after a 10-year initialisation period during which the contact network is allowed to evolve while keeping the demographic structure of Germany from 1993 constant. (c) to (f) contact structure in later years. The grey bar charts on the right hand sides of the contact visualizations show the demographic distribution of Germany of the given years.
Figure 3Demographic and network properties in a randomly picked simulation on 23 September 2012 (i.e. at the end of the initialization period), a day of the year on which the seasonal variation factor is 1.0 (i.e. the transmission potential reaches its all year average). This day precedes the annual vaccination period and the main transmission period. (a) Demographic structure of Germany; (b) average number of contacts per individual; (c) expected number of individuals who are infected by a single case whose age is given on the horizontal axis (averaged over the 4 influenza strains; the high number of expected infections caused by children derives from their long infectious period, their high connectivity and the immunity status of their contacts).
Figure 4Results of a randomly selected simulation. (a) Weekly influenza infection incidence (all strains and lineages) in the TIV scenario. (b) Weekly incidence of B/Yam infections only; years in which B/Yam is not contained in TIV have a dark grey background; the introduction of new drift variants is shown by dashed vertical lines; in 2028, the vaccine is mismatched to the newly introduced drift variant (light grey background). (c) Cumulative number of all influenza infections which occur in the TIV scenario (dashed) and in the QIV scenario (solid line). All three graphs relate to the same simulation.
Average annual results (with 95% confidence intervals) obtained for the 20 year evaluation period (calculated from 2,000 simulations using the baseline parameter values) in a simulated population of about 80,000 individuals
| 0-15 | 2152 | 2073 | 79 | 3.6 |
| | (2140–2164) | (2061–2085) | (75–83) | (3.4-3.8) |
| 16-60 | 5470 | 5247 | 223 | 4.0 |
| | (5433–5506) | (5211–5282) | (212–235) | (3.8-4.2) |
| 61+ | 1321 | 1228 | 93 | 6.9 |
| | (1311–1331) | (1219–1237) | (90–97) | (6.7-7.2) |
| all | 8943 | 8548 | 395 | 4.3 |
| (8885–9001) | (8491–8604) | (376–414) | (4.1-4.5) |
Figure 5Probability of extreme influenza years. (a) Risk that the number of Influenza B infections per year in Germany exceeds the threshold given on the horizontal axis (solid line: TIV vaccination; dashed line: QIV vaccination). (b) Relative reduction in the risk of exceeding the threshold if QIV is used instead of TIV. Evaluation of 400,000 simulation years (10,000 simulations of 20 years for TIV and for QIV).
Figure 6Results of a sensitivity analysis in which the basic reproduction number is varied from 1.2 to 2.0. For each value, 1,000 simulations with about 80,000 individuals are run for 20 years. Average annual number of infections for (a) the TIV scenario and (b) the QIV scenario. (c) Average number of infections prevented per year by QIV. Mean values are connected.
Figure 7Results of a sensitivity analysis in which the immunity loss rate is varied such that the expected duration of naturally acquired Influenza A(H1N1) immunity lasts 4 to 12 years. For each value, 1,000 simulations with about 80,000 individuals are run for 20 years; 2,000 simulations for the baseline duration of 6 years. The same rate is applied to all influenza infections leading to the same average duration for B/Vic and B/Yam, but to a shorter duration for A(H3N2), due to the more frequent appearance of drift variants (see Appendix 4 for details). Average annual number of infections for (a) the TIV scenario and (b) the QIV scenario. (c) Average number of infections prevented per year by QIV. Mean values are connected.
Figure 8Results of a sensitivity analysis in which the lineage cross protection is varied. For each value, 1,000 simulations with about 80,000 individuals are run for 20 years; 2,000 simulations for the baseline value of 0.6. Average annual number of infections for (a) the TIV scenario and (b) the QIV scenario. (c) Average number of infections prevented per year by QIV. Mean values are connected.
Sero-conversion rates as reported by Langley et al. [59], defined as the proportion of vaccinees with a pre-vaccination titer <1:10 and a post-vaccination titer ≥1:40, or a pre-vaccination titer ≥1:10 and at least a 4-fold increase in post-vaccination titer
| TIV-Vic (n = 870) | 41.3% (n = 359) | 71.5% (n = 622) |
| TIV-Yam (n = 877) | 73.4% (n = 644) | 29.9% (n = 262) |
Abbreviations: TIV-Vic, trivalent influenza vaccine with Victoria lineage B strain; TIV-Yam, trivalent influenza vaccine with Yamagata lineage B strain. The numbers of sero-converters (n) were calculated from the percentages.
Figure 9Immunologic results of about 500,000 TIV and QIV vaccinations which are performed in the 20 year evaluation period of a randomly selected simulation. The pie charts display the percentages of vaccinees who are immunized (green), boostered (blue) or fail to respond immunologically (grey). Immunologic responses with respect to A(H1N1) and A(H3N2) are averaged as “Influenza A”, and immunologic responses with respect to B/Vic and B/Yam are averaged as “Influenza B”. As TIV only contains one B lineage, the immunologic response to the missing lineage is either missing (grey) or it is caused by a cross immunization (light green) or cross-immunizing booster event (light blue).
Sensitivity analysis exploring the influence of the basic reproduction number R
| 1.2 | 5880 | 1954 | 3054 | 1400 | 1075 | 325 | 9.5 |
| (5823–5936) | (1923–1985) | (3018–3089) | (1379–1422) | (1056–1095) | (306–344) | (8.9-10.1) | |
| 1.3 | 7221 | 3061 | 3754 | 1999 | 1626 | 373 | 7.3 |
| (7151–7290) | (3018–3104) | (3709–3798) | (1970–2028) | (1599–1652) | (350–396) | (6.8-7.7) | |
| 1.4 | 8359 | 4106 | 4363 | 2541 | 2167 | 374 | 5.5 |
| (8276–8442) | (4055–4158) | (4311–4415) | (2506–2577) | (2133–2201) | (350–398) | (5.2-5.9) | |
| 1.5 | 9302 | 5009 | 4889 | 3063 | 2677 | 386 | 4.8 |
| (9209–9395) | (4946–5071) | (4830–4947) | (3021–3105) | (2638–2717) | (360–411) | (4.4-5.1) | |
| 1.6 | 10154 | 5787 | 5345 | 3482 | 3086 | 396 | 4.2 |
| (10051–10256) | (5716–5858) | (5280–5410) | (3435–3529) | (3041–3132) | (370–422) | (3.9-4.5) | |
| 1.7 | 10893 | 6510 | 5736 | 3880 | 3469 | 411 | 3.9 |
| (10784–11002) | (6433–6587) | (5664–5809) | (3826–3934) | (3419–3518) | (385–437) | (3.7-4.2) | |
| 1.8 | 11494 | 7116 | 6060 | 4218 | 3820 | 398 | 3.5 |
| (11374–11614) | (7032–7200) | (5982–6138) | (4160–4277) | (3765–3875) | (372–424) | (3.3-3.7) | |
| 1.9 | 12063 | 7669 | 6383 | 4523 | 4139 | 383 | 3.1 |
| (11935–12190) | (7578–7760) | (6301–6466) | (4461–4584) | (4081–4198) | (357–409) | (2.9-3.3) | |
| 2.0 | 12354 | 8183 | 6640 | 4790 | 4404 | 385 | 3.0 |
| (12227–12480) | (8087–8279) | (6550–6731) | (4724–4855) | (4342–4467) | (359–411) | (2.8-3.2) | |
Average annual results (with 95% confidence intervals) obtained for the 20 year evaluation period (calculated from 1,000 simulations for each combination of R and vaccination strategy in a simulated population of about 80,000 individuals (2,000 simulations each for the baseline value of R = 1.575; boldface line). The last column shows what percentage of all influenza A and B infections which occur under TIV vaccination can additionally be prevented by QIV.
Sensitivity analysis exploring the influence of the duration of naturally acquired immunity D
| 4 | 12644 | 6965 | 6743 | 4302 | 3785 | 517 | 4.6 |
| (12548–12740) | (6896–7035) | (6681–6805) | (4256–4349) | (3741–3829) | (490–545) | (4.3-4.8) | |
| 8 | 8482 | 4944 | 4474 | 2924 | 2595 | 329 | 4.1 |
| (8385–8579) | (4878–5010) | (4410–4539) | (2879–2970) | (2552–2638) | (305–354) | (3.8-4.4) | |
| 10 | 7682 | 4524 | 4055 | 2631 | 2363 | 267 | 3.7 |
| (7585–7780) | (4460–4589) | (3990–4119) | (2585–2676) | (2320–2406) | (243–291) | (3.3-4.0) | |
| 12 | 7209 | 4259 | 3766 | 2476 | 2194 | 282 | 4.1 |
| (7110–7307) | (4195–4323) | (3702–3831) | (2432–2520) | (2152–2236) | (257–306) | (3.7-4.5) | |
Average annual results (with 95% confidence intervals) obtained for the 20 year evaluation period (calculated from 1,000 simulations for each combination of D and vaccination strategy in a simulated population of about 80,000 individuals (2,000 simulations each for the baseline value of 6 years; boldface line). The immunity loss rate (baseline value 1/(9.13 years)) is varied to obtain the average duration of immunity given in the D column; these values apply to A(H1N1) and to the B lineages. Due to the higher drift frequency, the resulting durations for A(H3N2) are lower: 3.2 years, 4.5 years, 5.5 years, 6.4 years and 7.1 years, respectively. The last column shows what percentage of all influenza A and B infections which occur under TIV vaccination can additionally be prevented by QIV.
Sensitivity analysis exploring the influence of the degree of Influenza B lineage cross protection L
| 0% | 8283 | 6552 | 4372 | 2180 | 17,9 |
| (8224–8394) | (6477–6627) | (4313–4431) | (2142–2217) | (17,6-18,2) | |
| 10% | 7557 | 5760 | 4009 | 1751 | 15,4 |
| (7491–7649) | (5692–5827) | (3954–4063) | (1716–1786) | (15,1-15,7) | |
| 20% | 6961 | 5140 | 3772 | 1368 | 12,7 |
| (6890–7037) | (5079–5200) | (3720–3824) | (1336–1399) | (12,5-13,0) | |
| 30% | 6491 | 4624 | 3574 | 1050 | 10,2 |
| (6445–6587) | (4569–4680) | (3526–3623) | (1020–1080) | (10,0-10,5) | |
| 40% | 6144 | 4216 | 3386 | 830 | 8,4 |
| (6070–6206) | (4163–4269) | (3339–3433) | (801–859) | (8,1-8,7) | |
| 50% | 5837 | 3865 | 3276 | 589 | 6,2 |
| (5783–5916) | (3815–3914) | (3230–3322) | (562–615) | (5,9-6,5) | |
Average annual results (with 95% confidence intervals) obtained for the 20 year evaluation period (calculated from 1,000 simulations for each combination of L and vaccination strategy in a simulated population of about 80,000 individuals (2,000 simulations each for the baseline parameter value L = 60%; boldface line). The last column shows what percentage of all influenza A and B infections which occur under TIV vaccination can additionally be prevented by QIV.
Sensitivity analysis exploring the influence of the duration of indirect protection against infection
| 7 | 9024 | 8617 | 407 | 4.3 |
| (8948–9100) | (8541–8694) | (367–447) | (3.9-4.8) | |
| 14 | 9176 | 9727 | 449 | 4.7 |
| (9097–9254) | (8652–8802) | (409–488) | (4.2-5.1) | |
| 21 | 9186 | 8722 | 465 | 4.9 |
| (9114–9259) | (8649–8794) | (424–505) | (4.5-5.3) | |
| 28 | 9151 | 8732 | 420 | 4.3 |
| (9077–9226) | (8660–8804) | (378–461) | (3.9-4.8) |
Average annual results (with 95% confidence intervals) obtained for the 20 year evaluation period (calculated from 1,000 simulations for each combination of the unspecific protection and vaccination strategy in a simulated population of about 80,000 individuals (2,000 simulations each for the baseline value indicated by z = 0; boldface line). Indirect protection begins 1 day after infection and ends z days after infection; it prevents infection with any one of the influenza viruses. The last column shows what percentage of all influenza infections which occur under TIV vaccination can additionally be prevented by QIV.
Sensitivity analysis exploring the influence the contact network turnover
| Lower | 9039 | 8596 | 442 | 4.9 | 0.030% |
| (8955–9123) | (8513–8680) | (416–470) | (4.6-5.2) | ||
| Higher | 9135 | 8719 | 416 | 4.5 | 9.310% |
| (9053–9218) | (8638–8800) | (390–442) | (4.2-4.8) |
Average annual results (with 95% confidence intervals) obtained for the 20 year evaluation period (calculated from 1,000 simulations for each combination of network turnover and vaccination strategy in a simulated population of about 80,000 individuals (2,000 simulations each for baseline turnover; boldface line). Higher network turnover is obtained by replacing a random sample of 10% of all contacts annually. Lower turnover is obtained by calling the “repair routine” which matches the simulated contact network with the POLYMOD matrix once a year instead of daily (this leads to larger and longer lasting differences between the simulated network and the POLYMOD matrix). The last column shows what percentage of the “childhood acquaintances” of 10 year old children at the beginning of the simulation are still among their contacts at the end of the simulation when they are 50 year adults.