| Literature DB >> 26201316 |
Taro Kamigaki1, Satoshi Mimura2, Yoshihiro Takahashi3, Hitoshi Oshitani4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Households are one of the major settings of influenza transmission in the community and transmission is frequently initiated by school-aged children. We surveyed households with primary school (PS) and/ or junior high school (JH) children for the 2012-13 influenza season in Odate, Japan then characterized the epidemiology of influenza household transmission as well as estimated the serial intervals.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26201316 PMCID: PMC4512025 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-015-1007-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Fig. 1The daily number of influenza cases reported in the questionnaire survey (line) and in a surveillance study of Odate City (grey bars) during the 2012–2013 epidemic season
The number and percentages of reported influenza cases among surveyed households
| No. of respondents (%a) | |
|---|---|
| Households responding to survey | 363 |
| Households with at least one influenza case | 356 (98.1) |
| Households with a single influenza case | 202 (56.7) |
| Households with ≥2 cases | 154 (43.3) |
| 2 cases | 93 (26.1) |
| 3 cases | 47 (13.2) |
| 4 cases | 10 (2.8) |
| 5 cases | 4 (1.1) |
a The percentage for households with at least one influenza case was calculated as the proportion to households responding to survey. Others were calculated as the proportion to households with at least one influenza case
The number of both primary and secondary influenza cases by age group, family member category, influenza vaccination, and antiviral drug prescriptions
| No. of total influenza cases (%) | No. of primary cases (%) | No. of secondary cases (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total | 589 | 366 | 223 |
| Age groupa | |||
| <5 years | 26 (4.4) | 8 (2.2) | 18 (8.1) |
| 5–9 years | 138 (23.5) | 101 (27.7) | 37 (16.6) |
| 10–19 years | 302 (51.4) | 228 (62.6) | 74 (33.2) |
| 20–49 years | 91 (15.5) | 23 (6.3) | 68 (30.5) |
| 50–64 years | 12 (2.0) | 1 (0.3) | 11 (4.9) |
| >65 years | 18 (3.1) | 3 (0.8) | 15 (6.7) |
| Category | |||
| Preschool | 38 (6.5) | 17 (4.6) | 21 (9.4) |
| Primary school | 273 (46.3) | 204 (55.7) | 69 (30.9) |
| Junior high school | 146 (24.8) | 113 (30.9) | 33 (14.8) |
| High school | 11 (1.9) | 5 (1.4) | 6 (2.7) |
| Father | 36 (6.1) | 10 (2.7) | 26 (11.7) |
| Mother | 54 (9.2) | 11 (3.0) | 43 (19.3) |
| Grandparents and other adults | 31 (5.3) | 6 (1.6) | 25 (11.2) |
| Seasonal influenza vaccination | 258 (43.9) | 161 (44.2) | 93 (43.5) |
| Antiviral drug prescription | 558 (95.1) | 364 (94.8) | 212 (95.1) |
a The total number of primary influenza cases to calculate the percentage by age group was 364
Fig. 2From whom/to whom influenza transmissions in households; (a) number distributions, (b) distributions of mean onset intervals. Data collected from the Odate questionnaire study during the 2012–2013 season. Abbreviations: PreS, preschool age children, PS, primary school age children, JH, junior high school children, HS, high school children
The characteristics of epidemiological factors observed in primary cases between with and without household transmission events
| Cases with household influenza transmission (N = 114) | Cases without household influenza transmission (N = 198) | P value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median onset month | January 2013 | January 2013 | 0.052 |
| Median age of primary cases (range) | 11 (6–15) | 12 (6–15) | 0.01 |
| Antiviral treatment for primary cases (%) | 107 (93.9) | 189 (95.5) | 0.61 |
| Influenza vaccination (%) | 90 (45.3) | 107 (42.7) | 0.79 |
| Median absent days (range) | 4.5 (0–10) | 4 (0–14) | 0.009 |
Note: Primary cases only included primary school and junior high school children
Fig. 3Cumulative distribution of the serial interval of influenza cases fitted by parametric models (lognormal, gamma and Weibull distributions)
Factors affecting the length of serial intervals and the acceleration factors estimated with a multiple parametric model
| Variables | No. of cases observed | AF | 95 % CI |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary cases | |||
| Primary school | 118 | Ref. | |
| Junior high school | 44 | 1.29 | (1.05–1.59) |
| Secondary cases | |||
| Preschool | 22 | 0.77 | (0.55–1.08) |
| Primary school | 31 | 0.75 | (0.55–1.08) |
| Junior high school | 20 | 0.60 | (0.43–0.85) |
| High school | 2 | 0.71 | (0.31–1.66) |
| Father | 26 | Ref. | |
| Mother | 39 | 0.86 | (0.64–1.15) |
| Grandparents and other adults | 22 | 0.93 | (0.66–1.30) |
| Antiviral prescription for primary cases | 150 | 0.81 | (0.56–1.18) |
| Vaccination for primary cases | 80 | 1.06 | (0.89–1.27) |
| Absence interval of primary cases | |||
| ≤3 days | 42 | Ref. | |
| 3 - 7 days | 102 | 1.13 | (0.91-1.40) |
| >7 days | 17 | 1.74 | (1.25-2.42) |
Note: Households where primary cases were primary shool or junior high school children were included in the analysis
AF Acceleration factor,CI Confidence interval