Literature DB >> 27786671

Impact of universal mass vaccination with monovalent inactivated hepatitis A vaccines - A systematic review.

Anke L Stuurman1, Cinzia Marano2, Eveline M Bunge1, Laurence De Moerlooze2, Daniel Shouval3.   

Abstract

The WHO recommends integration of universal mass vaccination (UMV) against hepatitis A virus (HAV) in national immunization schedules for children aged ≥1 year, if justified on the basis of acute HAV incidence, declining endemicity from high to intermediate and cost-effectiveness. This recommendation has been implemented in several countries. Our aim was to assess the impact of UMV using monovalent inactivated hepatitis A vaccines on incidence and persistence of anti-HAV (IgG) antibodies in pediatric populations. We conducted a systematic review of literature published between 2000 and 2015 in PubMed, Cochrane Library, LILACS, IBECS identifying a total of 27 studies (Argentina, Belgium, China, Greece, Israel, Panama, the United States and Uruguay). All except one study showed a marked decline in the incidence of hepatitis A post introduction of UMV. The incidence in non-vaccinated age groups decreased as well, suggesting herd immunity but also rising susceptibility. Long-term anti-HAV antibody persistence was documented up to 17 y after a 2-dose primary vaccination. In conclusion, introduction of UMV in countries with intermediate endemicity for HAV infection led to a considerable decrease in the incidence of hepatitis A in vaccinated and in non-vaccinated age groups alike.

Entities:  

Keywords:  hepatitis A vaccine; incidence; long-term persistence; systematic review; universal vaccination

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27786671      PMCID: PMC5360128          DOI: 10.1080/21645515.2016.1242539

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hum Vaccin Immunother        ISSN: 2164-5515            Impact factor:   3.452


Introduction

Most data on the incidence of acute HAV infection and prevalence of immunity cited in the literature are relatively old. According to World Health Organization (WHO) estimates, there were 126 million cases of acute hepatitis A in 2005. Acute hepatitis A-related morbidity and mortality increase with age. In children aged <6 years, ∼70% of infections are asymptomatic; if illness does occur, it is typically anicteric. In contrast, in older children, adolescents and adults, infection often leads to clinically overt acute hepatitis. Acute hepatitis A in adults may lead to prolonged incapacitation and rarely also to acute liver failure in previously healthy individuals and in patients with chronic liver disease. There is no specific treatment for acute hepatitis A except for supportive care and liver transplantation in the rare cases with liver failure. The virus is transmitted through the fecal-oral route, either through person-to-person contact or through contaminated food or water. The highest rates of infection are found in areas with poor sanitary conditions and hygienic practices and lack of access to clean water. Other risk factors for acquiring HAV include intravenous drug abuse and men having sex with men (MSM). Improvements in sanitation and access to clean water reduce viral circulation and infection and therefore the risk of waterborne HAV transmission and the overall rates of transmission. This reduction can be observed in the absence of vaccination as well as when vaccination programs are in place. The first commercially produced hepatitis A vaccine was launched in 1992. Both inactivated and live attenuated vaccines against hepatitis A are currently available. A live attenuated vaccine is mainly used in China; most other countries use inactivated vaccines. Several monovalent inactivated hepatitis A vaccines are available, which are licensed for children aged one year or older (Table S1). The WHO considers that HAV vaccines of different brand names are interchangeable. The antigen content differs between vaccines, however, all are considered safe and immunogenic. Long-term persistence of antibodies has been shown with 2-dose vaccination schedules in adults. Areas with high viral transmission rates have a lower rate of severe morbidity and mortality than areas with lower viral transmission rates, as there are few susceptible adults in areas with high transmission rates. However, epidemiologic shifts from high to intermediate levels of HAV circulation, resulting from improvements in sanitation and hygiene, are paradoxically associated with an increase in susceptibility to infection due to decreasing immunity in the population as well as to more symptomatic disease due to older age at first infection. The impact of vaccination can therefore be confirmed by a decline of reported symptomatic cases, of fulminant hepatitis cases and of liver transplants. In these settings, the WHO recommends the integration of HAV vaccination into the national immunisation schedule for children aged one year and above, if indicated on the basis of incidence of acute hepatitis and consideration of cost-effectiveness. Most countries that have introduced hepatitis A vaccination in their immunisation programs use the available monovalent vaccines. Combined vaccines that include hepatitis A and B or hepatitis A and typhoid have also been developed. However, with the exception of Quebec in Canada and Catalonia in Spain where the combined hepatitis A and B vaccine is used in the, pediatric immunisation programmes, these are mainly intended for use in adult travelers or patients with specific risks like chronic liver diseases. Furthermore, hepatitis B vaccination has been introduced as a birth dose, monovalent or combined with other antigens, since the late 1990s or early 2000s in most countries. This review is therefore focused on the use of monovalent hepatitis A vaccine in the universal mass vaccination (UMV) setting. Single-dose inactivated hepatitis A vaccines have been introduced in the national immunisation program in Argentina and additional countries in Latin America are considering adopting a similar protocol. This option seems to be comparable in terms of short and intermediate-term effectiveness, and is less expensive and easier to implement than the classical 2-dose schedule. However, until further long-term experience has been obtained with a single-dose schedule, in individuals at substantial risk of contracting hepatitis A, and in immunocompromised individuals, a 2-dose schedule may be preferable. Following an increase in the number of HAV outbreaks in the 1990s, Israel was the first country to introduce nationwide UMV for 18 months old toddlers using 2 doses of Havrix™. Additional countries that introduced UMV programs for hepatitis A include among others Argentina, Bahrain, Brazil, China, Greece, Panama, the US and Uruguay; as well as regions of Belarus (Minsk City), Canada (Quebec), Italy (Puglia) and Spain (Catalonia). The objectives of this systematic review were to: (1) summarize data on the impact of monovalent inactivated hepatitis A vaccines in the context of UMV on the incidence of acute hepatitis A; (2) assess the impact of UMV on other parameters than incidence (e.g. indirect effects such as herd immunity); (3) summarize data on the long-term persistence of anti-HAV (IgG) antibodies in pediatric populations.

Methods

Search strategy

The PubMed, Cochrane, LILACS and IBECS databases were searched for literature in English, Spanish and Portuguese published between January 1st 2000 and July 25th 2016 (date of search). LILACS and IBECS are bibliographic databases with health science literature from Latin America, the Caribbean (LILACS) and Spain (IBECS). A search string combining terms on hepatitis A, vaccines and antibodies was built and adapted for use in each database. The search string used in PubMed was: “Hepatitis A Antibodies”[Mesh] OR “Hepatitis A Vaccines”[Mesh] OR “Hepatitis A/prevention and control”[Mesh] OR ((“Hepatitis A”[Mesh] OR “Hepatitis A virus”[Mesh] OR hepatitis A[tiab]) AND (“Vaccination”[Mesh] OR “Antibodies”[Mesh] OR vaccin*[tiab] OR immuniz*[tiab] OR immunis*[tiab] OR immune[tiab] OR immunity[tiab] OR immunology[tiab] OR antibod*[tiab])) OR Anti-HAV[tiab].

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

In this systematic review only peer-reviewed primary research articles were included; review articles were excluded, but the reference lists of systematic reviews were screened to identify additional relevant primary articles. Review of the gray literature was not included. For review objectives 1 and 2, only observational studies conducted in a setting with UMV with monovalent, inactivated hepatitis A vaccines were included (Table S1). Studies from settings where hepatitis A vaccination was only implemented at the regional level (for example in Puglia, Italy or Minsk City, Belarus), or from settings in which live attenuated hepatitis A vaccines or only combined hepatitis A vaccines were used in the UMV programs were excluded. Furthermore, studies in at risk populations, outbreak studies, modeling studies and economic evaluations were excluded; as were studies that did not present incidence or prevalence baseline data (i.e. data from the era prior to the introduction of UMV). For review objective 3, studies were only included if they were conducted with monovalent, inactivated hepatitis A vaccines in children (at time of primary vaccination) and provided follow-up data for a minimum of 5 y.

Selection process

Articles were selected in 3 steps. Firstly, titles and abstracts identified through the search strategy were screened to identify potentially relevant articles. All titles and abstracts were screened in duplicate by 2 independent researchers. Any disagreements were resolved by the 2 reviewers by discussing the title and abstract; in case any doubts remained, the full-text was screened to ascertain if the article answered one of the research questions. Secondly, the full-text of the selected articles was screened, keeping in mind the inclusion and exclusion criteria described above, to determine whether it answered one of the review questions. If any aspects of the methodology were unclear, a comment was placed in the results table. Thirdly, for articles that presented duplicate data, the article that presented the most complete data (e.g., longer follow-up) was included.

Results

The search resulted in 3313 unique hits, of which 27 were included in this systematic review (Fig. 1). In total, 10 articles were included for review objective 1, 15 for review objective 2 and 10 for review objective 3. Some articles presented data for more than one review objective.
Figure 1.

Flowchart of the selection procedure.

Flowchart of the selection procedure.

Objective 1: Impact of UMV on HA incidence

Reduction in incidence

Ten studies provided data on incidence of acute hepatitis A before and after the introduction of hepatitis A UMV programs; all but one study (in Greece) found a marked decrease in acute hepatitis A incidence after UMV was implemented (Table 1). Declines were independent of the brand of the hepatitis A vaccine used in the programs; the number of doses that was given; the target age at first vaccination, which ranged from 12 to 24 months; or the attained vaccination coverage (range 25%–96.8%). After the introduction of UMV, the percent reduction in the incidence of acute hepatitis A was 88% in Argentina, >95% in Israel, 93% in Panama and 96% in Uruguay going form incidence rates ranging 6.0 to 142.4 per 100,000 population before vaccine introduction to a range of 0.4 to 7.9 per 100,000 population.
Table 1.

Effect of universal mass vaccination programs for hepatitis A on incidence of acute hepatitis A.

 Vaccination
     
Author; countryStart UMV; Target ageVaccine coverageVaccineData source of hepatitis A casesYears compared (before vs with UMV)aIncidence (95%CI) per 100,000 populationDecline (%)Commentsb
Single-dose immunization strategy      
Vizzotti et al. 201327 Argentina2005 1 yr96.8% for 2006–2011Havrix˜ 720EU, Vaqta™ 25U, Avaxim˜ 80U, Virohep-A Junior 12UIEarly Alert Module, National Health Surveillance System; passive clinical surveillance2000–2002 vs. 2006–201166.5 vs. 7.988.1

–Source and year of denominator data n.r.

–COI: none

Two-dose immunization strategy      
Mellou et al. 201440 Greece2008 >12 moVC with 1 dose among 3 yr old children 80%, with 2 doses 42% in 2013n.rNational surveillance data2007 vs. 20132–3 vs. 2ccCOI: none
Chodick et al. 200864 Israel1999 18 moReceived at least 1 dose:-<5 yrs: 9% (1999), 89% (2007)-5–14 yrs: 15% (1999), 68% (2007)Havrix˜ 720EU28Maccabi Healthcare Services; health maintenance organization1998 vs. 2007142.4 vs. 7.6d95.0

–MHS not representative of the general population (higher socio-economic class) (Daniel Shouval, personal communication, February 23, 2015)

–COI: none

Levine et al. 201547 Israel1999 18 moVC for vaccines given in 2003–2010 : 92% (dose 1), 88% (dose 2)Havrix˜ 720EUCases reported to the national surveillance system1993–1998 vs. 2008–201250.4 (35.9–64.9) vs. < 1.0>98COI: none
Estripeaut et al. 201550 Panama2007 > 12 moVC 1 dose 70.7% and 1 dose 40.1% in 2010Havrix˜ 720EUNational surveillance systems2000–2006 vs. 201051.1 vs. 3.793eGlaxoSmithKline Biologicals SA
Romero et al. 201236 Uruguay2007 vaccination of children 1–5 yrs old In 2008 >12 moVC 1 dose 74%n.r.National surveillance system2005 vs. 201069.6 vs. 2.796COI: n.r.
Erhart et al. 201249 Arizona, US1999c 2 yrs (1999) 1 yr (2006)VC with 1 dose (by age): −24–59 mo: 36% (2000), 65% (2006) −5–9 yrs: 24% (2000), 77% (2006)Havrix˜ 720EU, Vaqta˜ 25U69Arizona Department of Health Services and local public health departments; passive surveillance1994–1995 vs. 2006–200741 (41–42) vs. 2.6 (2.5–2.7)94e

–Year of denominator data n.r

–COI: n.r.

Ly et al. 201545 US1999f (vaccinating statesg) 2006 (all) 2 yrs (1999) 1 yr (2006)n.r.Havrix˜ 720EU, Vaqta˜ 25U69National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System1999 vs. 20116.0 vs. 0.493eCOI: none
Singleton et al. 201048 Alaska, US1999f 2 yrs (1999) 1 yr (2006)VC with ≥1 dose among children aged 24–35 mo:-2003: 72.7% (±95%CI 7.4)-2004: 69.9% (±95%CI 7.9)-2005: 66.8% (±95%CI 9.1)-2006: 65.9% (95%CI 57.1–73.7)Havrix˜ 720EU, Vaqta˜ 25U69Alaska Section of Epidemiology; surveillance1994–1995 vs. 2002–200722.2 vs. 0.995.9eCOI: n.r.
Wasley et al. 200535 Vaccinating statesg, US1999f 2 yrsVC for 1st dose among children aged 24–35 mo in 2003, in states in which routine vaccination was:

Recommended: 50%

To be considered: 25%

Havrix˜ 720EU, Vaqta˜ 25U69National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System; passive national surveillance1990–1997 vs. 200310.7 vs. 2.676COI: none

CI: confidence interval; COI: conflict of interest; EU: ELISA units; HA: hepatitis A; MHS: Maccabi Healthcare Services; mo: months; n.r.: not reported; U: antigen units; UI: international unit; UMV: universal mass vaccination; US: United States; VC: vaccine coverage; yr(s): year(s)

Years compared as available in the respective article. If more options were available, the most recent pre-vaccination and the most recent post-introduction year were used.

Only industry-related conflicts of interest, funding source or financial disclosures reported

Numbers read from graph. The incidence dropped to almost 0 in 2011 and rose again after that. Numbers read from graph therefore too imprecise to calculate % decline.

Per 100,000 MHS members

Calculated based using the formula [1-(HA incidence with UMV/HA incidence before UMV)]*100%

Vaccination of American Indian and Alaska Native children started in 1996

Vaccinating states: states in which HA childhood vaccination was recommend by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington) or considered (Arkansas, Colorado, Missouri, Montana, Texas, Wyoming) as of 1999

Effect of universal mass vaccination programs for hepatitis A on incidence of acute hepatitis A. –Source and year of denominator data n.r. COI: none –MHS not representative of the general population (higher socio-economic class) (Daniel Shouval, personal communication, February 23, 2015) COI: none –Year of denominator data n.r COI: n.r. Recommended: 50% To be considered: 25% CI: confidence interval; COI: conflict of interest; EU: ELISA units; HA: hepatitis A; MHS: Maccabi Healthcare Services; mo: months; n.r.: not reported; U: antigen units; UI: international unit; UMV: universal mass vaccination; US: United States; VC: vaccine coverage; yr(s): year(s) Years compared as available in the respective article. If more options were available, the most recent pre-vaccination and the most recent post-introduction year were used. Only industry-related conflicts of interest, funding source or financial disclosures reported Numbers read from graph. The incidence dropped to almost 0 in 2011 and rose again after that. Numbers read from graph therefore too imprecise to calculate % decline. Per 100,000 MHS members Calculated based using the formula [1-(HA incidence with UMV/HA incidence before UMV)]*100% Vaccination of American Indian and Alaska Native children started in 1996 Vaccinating states: states in which HA childhood vaccination was recommend by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington) or considered (Arkansas, Colorado, Missouri, Montana, Texas, Wyoming) as of 1999 In Greece, a UMV program was initiated in 2008 however due the low endemcity level (<3.0 per 100,000 population) registered since the late 1980s, the program has not had significant impact on the notification rate of acute hepatitis A cases.

Objective 2: Impact of UMV on other measures and indirect effects

Impact on other outcomes

In Argentina between 2000–2003 approximately 17 cases of fulminant hepatitis A were reported while between 2008–2011, 2 y after the introduction of UMV, no more cases were reported (Table 2). A study that looked at hepatitis A outbreaks in day care centers in the Southern District of Israel showed that no more outbreak-related acute hepatitis A cases were reported. Hepatitis A vaccination was implemented is some US States as of 1999, the rate of hepatitis A-related ambulatory healthcare visits among enrollees going from 20.9 in 1996–1997 to 8.7 in 2004. The age-adjusted hepatitis A-mortality rate decreased significantly from 0.51 in 1999–1995 to 0.28 in 2000–2004. The 2011 hepatitis A incidence rate was the lowest ever recorded for the United States, data form the National Inpatient Survey have shown a reduction in the HA hospitalization rates from 0.64 in 2004–2005 vs. 0.29 in 2010–2011, however the relative rates of hospitalized hepatitis A cases among overall acute hepatitis A cases increased. In Greece, the number of HA-related hospital admission per 1000 hospital admissions among children dropped from 77.3 (95% CI 58.7–95.9) in 1999 (year of introduction of vaccine in private market) to 18.5 (95% CI 8.2–28.9) in 2013. Furthermore the outbreaks in 2013 among Roma populations did not spread to the general population.
Table 2.

Effect of universal mass vaccination programs for hepatitis A on other outcome measures.

 Vaccination
      
Author; countryStart UMV; Target ageVaccine coverageBrand, EU, dosesData sourceOutcomeYears comparedBefore UMVWith UMVCommentsa
Single-dose immunization strategy     
Vizzotti et al. 201327 Argentina2005 1 yr96.8% for 2006–2011Havrix˜ 720EU, Vaqta˜ 25U, Avaxim˜ 80U, Virohep-A-Junior 12UI4 pediatric centers in Buenos Aires and Unique Central National Institute of Ablation and ImplantNumber of cases of HA-associated fulminant hepatic failure cases per year2000–2003 vs. 2008–2011∼17.5 b0

No case definition of fulminant hepatic failure

COI: none

Two-dose immunization strategy      
Papaevangelou et al. 2016 [ref] Athens, Greece2008 1 yr88% (dose 1), 82% (dose 2) among children aged 6 yrs in 2012n.r.Infectious Disease Unit of a Tertiary Pediatric HospitalHA hospital admission per 1000 admission among children aged 0–14 yrs1999–2008 vs. 2009–201350.5 (95%CI 29.2–67.1)20.8 (95%CI 19.2–30.1) –COI: none
Belmaker et al. 200741 Negev, Israel1999 18 moBirth cohort 2000, by age 3 yrs: 86.4% (dose 1), 77.3% (dose 2)Havrix˜ 720EUTreating physicians, medical laboratories, Ministry of Education, concerned parentsYearly average of HA cases associated with outbreaks in day care and school settingsc1993–1999 vs. 2001–200545.60

Not clear how complete the notifications of outbreaks are (e.g. Ministry of Health not included as a source)

COI: n.r.

Collier et al. 201444 US1999e (vaccinating statesf) 2006 (nationwide) 2 yrs (1999) 1 yr (2006)43n.r.Havrix˜ 720EU, Vaqta˜ 25U69National Inpatient Survey discharge data (∼20% of all community hospital discharges)Hospitalizations for HA illness as principal diagnosis per 100,000 personsd2004–2005 vs. 2010–20110.640.29

Source and year of denominator data n.r.

COI: none

Ly et al. 201445 US1999e (vaccinating statesf) 2006 (nationwide) 2 yrs (1999) 1 yr (2006)n.r.n.rNational Notifiable Disease Surveillance System and Multiple Cause of death% of HA-cases that was hospitalized; and HA-related mortality per 100,000 populationg1999 vs. 20117.3; 0.124.5; 0.02 COI: none
Vogt et al. 200843 Vaccinating statesf, US1999 2 yrsn.r.Havrix˜ 720EU, Vaqta˜ 25U69CDC's National Center for Health StatisticsAge-adjusted HA mortality rate per 1 million personsh1990–1995 vs. 2000–20040.510.28

–Denominator data from 2000–2004, but incidence data from 1990–2004

–Some decline in mortality attributable to temporal trends, as reflected by statistically significant declines in mortality in states in which no large-scale vaccination programs were implemented

–COI: none

Zhou et al. 200742 Vaccinating statesf, US1999 2 yrs2004, children aged 2 yrs: 30.0%(in-plan vaccination rate)Havrix˜ 720EU, Vaqta˜ 25U69Medstat MarketScan databaseHA-related ambulatory visits per 100,000 MarketScan enrollees1996–1997 vs. 200420.98.7

–Causal role for the vaccination program in decline is supported by greater decline in rate of HA ambulatory visits in vaccinating states vs. non-vaccinating states.

–Population somewhat homogeneous and not nationally representative.

–COI: n.r.

CDC: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; CI: confidence interval; COI: conflict of interest; EU: ELISA units; HA: hepatitis A; NIS: National Inpatient Survey; n.r.: not reported; U: antigen units; UI: international unit; UMV: universal mass vaccination; US: United States; yr(s): years

Only industry-related conflicts of interest, funding source or financial disclosures reported

Outbreak in 2004, 27 cases of HA-associated fulminant hepatitis failure

Outbreak: 2 or more reported cases of HA illness occurring within a month of each other in a day care facility, kindergarten, primary school or junior high school

Extrapolated to nationwide hospitalizations using discharge weights

Vaccination of American Indian and Alaska Native children started in 1996

Vaccinating states: states with hepatitis A vaccination recommendations by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington) or considered (Arkansas, Colorado, Missouri, Montana, Texas, Wyoming) as of 1999

HA listed as any cause of death in record axis, of HIV as underlying cause of death and HA as any other cause in record or entity axis

HA listed as underlying cause of death

Indirect effects

A decline in acute hepatitis A incidence was seen in all age groups after the introduction of UMV in Israel in 1999 as well as in the US, where vaccination was introduced in 1999 in some States, Such a drop was also recorded in Argentina in 2005 and in Panama in 2007 (Table 3).
Table 3.

Decline (%) in hepatitis A incidence by age group (years) before and after the introduction of universal vaccination.a

   Decline in hepatitis A incidence (%, with p-value or 95%CI when available)
Reference; CountryYears compared (before UMV vs. with UMV)Target age at 1st doseAge groups with children younger than target age UMV programAge groups with most vaccinated childrenOther age groupsOldest age groups
Vizzotti et al. 201427 Argentina2000–2002 vs. 2006–20111 yrAge < 1: n.r.Age 0–4: 90.5% (p < 0.0001) Age 5–9: 89.1% (p = 0.0004)Age 10–14: 86.6% (p < 0.0001) Age 15–44: 72.8% (p < 0.0019)Age > 45: 58.1% (p = 0.0033)
Dagan et al. 200528 Israel1993–1998 vs 2002–20041 yrAge < 1: 84.3% (p < 0.005)Age 1–4: 98.2% (p < 0.001) Age 5–9: 96.5% (p < 0.001)Age 10–14: 95.2% (p = 0.01) Age 15–44: 91.3% (p < 0.001)Age 45–64: 90.6% (p = 0.15) Age ≥65: 77.3% (p = 0.009)
Estripeaut et al. 201550 Panama2000–2006 vs.201012–18 moAge < 1: 100.0%Age 1–4: 95.1Age 5–9: 97.8% Age 10–14: 96.6% Age 15–19:91.7% Age 20–24:90.2% Age 25–49: 88.9%Age ≥50: 61.8%
Ly et al. 201545 All states, US1999 vs. 20111 yrAge <1: n.r.Age 0–19: 95.9%Age 20–39: 93.1%
Wasley et al. 200535 Vaccinating statesb, US1990–1997 vs. 20032 yrsAge < 2: 91.4% (95%CI 86.3–94.8)Age 2–9: 95.6% (95%CI 94.8–96.1%) Age 10–18: 90.6% (95%CI 89.4–91.5%)Age ≥19: 84.5% (95%CI 84.0–85.5)

CI: confidence interval; mo: months; UMV: universal mass vaccination; yr(s): year(s); n.r.: not reported; mo: months

Age-specific groups as reported in the articles. Only studies with age-specific data in the main text or tables (rather than graphs) are shown.

Vaccinating states: states in which HA childhood vaccination was recommend by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington) or considered (Arkansas, Colorado, Missouri, Montana, Texas, Wyoming) as of 1999

Vizotti et al describes a 1-dose vaccination program while the other publications refer to 2-dose vaccination programs.

Effect of universal mass vaccination programs for hepatitis A on other outcome measures. No case definition of fulminant hepatic failure COI: none Not clear how complete the notifications of outbreaks are (e.g. Ministry of Health not included as a source) COI: n.r. Source and year of denominator data n.r. COI: none –Denominator data from 2000–2004, but incidence data from 1990–2004 –Some decline in mortality attributable to temporal trends, as reflected by statistically significant declines in mortality in states in which no large-scale vaccination programs were implemented COI: none –Causal role for the vaccination program in decline is supported by greater decline in rate of HA ambulatory visits in vaccinating states vs. non-vaccinating states. –Population somewhat homogeneous and not nationally representative. COI: n.r. CDC: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; CI: confidence interval; COI: conflict of interest; EU: ELISA units; HA: hepatitis A; NIS: National Inpatient Survey; n.r.: not reported; U: antigen units; UI: international unit; UMV: universal mass vaccination; US: United States; yr(s): years Only industry-related conflicts of interest, funding source or financial disclosures reported Outbreak in 2004, 27 cases of HA-associated fulminant hepatitis failure Outbreak: 2 or more reported cases of HA illness occurring within a month of each other in a day care facility, kindergarten, primary school or junior high school Extrapolated to nationwide hospitalizations using discharge weights Vaccination of American Indian and Alaska Native children started in 1996 Vaccinating states: states with hepatitis A vaccination recommendations by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington) or considered (Arkansas, Colorado, Missouri, Montana, Texas, Wyoming) as of 1999 HA listed as any cause of death in record axis, of HIV as underlying cause of death and HA as any other cause in record or entity axis HA listed as underlying cause of death Decline (%) in hepatitis A incidence by age group (years) before and after the introduction of universal vaccination.a CI: confidence interval; mo: months; UMV: universal mass vaccination; yr(s): year(s); n.r.: not reported; mo: months Age-specific groups as reported in the articles. Only studies with age-specific data in the main text or tables (rather than graphs) are shown. Vaccinating states: states in which HA childhood vaccination was recommend by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington) or considered (Arkansas, Colorado, Missouri, Montana, Texas, Wyoming) as of 1999 Vizotti et al describes a 1-dose vaccination program while the other publications refer to 2-dose vaccination programs. Declines in incidence were generally highest in the age groups that contained the most vaccinated children. Incidence rates also dropped among children too young to be vaccinated in the programs. In most studies, the smallest declines in acute hepatitis A incidence were noted in the oldest investigated age groups. Similarly, a drop in hepatitis A-associated hospitalization rates was observed in non-vaccinated age groups in the US. In settings where many adults are likely to have natural immunity from prior infection, the drop in incidence in age groups not targeted by the UMV programs suggest a remarkable degree of herd immunity.

Objective 3: Long-term persistence of anti-HAV antibodies

Of the 10 included studies that reported on persistence of anti-HAV (IgG) antibodies more than 5 y after vaccination of a pediatric population, 2 studies were performed in Argentina, one in Belgium, 2 in China, one in Israel and 4 in the US (Table 4). In six studies, authors reported that children who received booster vaccinations after the primary immunisation schedule were excluded from the follow-up analyses. Follow-up among the included studies ranged from 5 to 17 y. In the study with the longest follow-up, 87 to 100% (depending on the vaccination schedule) of the children whose antibody levels were measured at follow-up were found to be seroprotected up to 17 y after vaccination.
Table 4.

Long-term persistence of anti-hepatitis A antibodies.

Author CountryInterventionPopulationNumber of participantsOutcomea: % (95%CI) seroprotectedOutcomea: GMC mIU/ml (95%CI)Commentsb
Espul et al. 201452 ArgentinaAvaxim˜ 80U Pediatric Gr1: 1 dose Gr2: 2 doses (schedule n.r.) Age at 1st vacc: 11–23 moHealthy children. Ineligible for follow-up analyses if received additional dose of HA vaccine (Gr1: n=8; Gr2: n=1).Gr1: 435 at 1 yr post-vaccination, 318 at 5 yr FUc Gr2: 108 at 1 yr post-vaccination, 85 at 5 yr FUcAt 5 yr FU, %≥10 mIU/mL: Gr1: 99.7% (98.3–100.0) Gr2: 100.0% (95.8–100.0)At 5 yr FU: Gr1: 122.5 (111.2–135.0) Gr2: 591.7 (479.9–729.4)Subjects whose anti-HAV IgG titres fell <10 mIU/mL at any of the scheduled visits were offered a booster vaccination. Sanofi Pasteur.
Lopez et al. 201568 ArgentinaAvaxim˜ 80U Pediatric 2 doses (0, 6 mo)Healthy children ≤ 15 years of age Ineligible for follow-up analyses if received additional dose of HA vaccine54 at start, 30 at 14–15 yr FUcAt 14–15 yr FU, %≥20 mIU/mL 100.0%At 14–15 yr FU: 253 (181–353)Sanofi Pasteur
Van Herck et al. 201573 BelgiumGr 1: Epaxal˜ Junior Gr2: Epaxal˜ Gr3: Havrix˜ 720 EU 2 doses (0, 6 mo)Healthy subjectsGr1: 121 at start, 85 at 5.5 yr FUd Gr2: 121 at start, 87 at 5.5 yr FUd Gr3: 60 at start, 41 at 5.5 yr FUdAt 5.5 yr FU, %≥10 mIU/mL: 100% At 5.5 yr FU, %≥20 mIU/mL: Gr1: 98.8% Gr2: 100% Epaxal˜ Gr3: 97.6%At 5.5 yr FU: Gr1: 171 (141–207) Gr2: 241 (201–287) Gr3: 152 (109–213)Crucell Switzerland
Bian et al. 201074 ChinaHavrix˜ 720 EU 2 doses (0, 6 mo) Mean age at 1st vacc: 2.1 yrsChildren from Zhenhai District and Beilum District200 at start, 110 at 10 yr FUdAt 10 yr FU, %≥5 mIU/mL: 99.09%At 10 yr FU: 61.59 (51.92–73.07)Children were “selected” to receive Havrix or live attenuated vaccine, but selection criteria n.r. COI: n.r.
Yu et al. 2016 [ref] ChinaGr1: Healive 250 U Gr2: Havrix˜ 720 EU(randomly allocated) 2 doses (0, 6 mo)Healthy childrenGr1: 300 at start, 230 at 5 yr FUc Gr2: 100 at start, 79 at 5 yr FUcAt 5 yr FU, %≥20 mIU/mL: Gr1: 99.1% (96.9–99.9) Gr2: 97.5% (91.2–99.7)At 5 yr FU: Gr1: 257.1 (226.9–291.4) Gr2: 168.1 (135.6–208.4)COI: none
Dagan et al. 2016 [ref] IsraelGr1: Epaxal˜ Jr (day 1) + RCV (day1) Gr2: Epaxal˜ Jr (day 1) + RCV (day 29) Gr3: Havrix˜ 720 EU (day 1) + RCV (day 1) (randomly allocated) 2 doses (0, 6 mo) Age at 1st vac: 12–15 moHealthy children No HA vacc given during follow-up.Gr1: 112 at start, 50 at 7.5 yr FUd Gr2: 106 at start, 54 at 7.5 yr FUe Gr3: 109 at start, 53 at 7.5 yr FUdAt 7.5 yr FU, % (95%CI) ≥10 mIU/mL: Gr1: 98.0% (89.4–99.9 Gr2: 96.3% (87.3–99.5) Gr3: 96.2% (87.0–99.5)At 7.5 yr FU: Gr1: 85 (64–111) Gr2: 80 (61–105) Gr3: 61 (47–79)Janssen Vaccines AG
Raczniak et al. 2013 (JID)51 USHavrix˜ 360 EUd 3 doses (schedule randomly allocated) Gr1: 0, 1, 2 mo Gr2: 0, 1, 6 mo Gr3: 0, 1, 12 mo Age at 1st vacc: 3–6 yrsAlaska Native children. Ineligible at 17 year follow-up if received a booster dose of HA vaccine (n=30)Gr1: 49 at start, 23 at 17.3 yrs FUd Gr2: 42 at start, 17 at 17.3 yrs FUc Gr3: 45 at start, 18 at 17.3 yrs FUcAt 17.3 yr FU, %≥20 mIU/mL: Gr1: 87% Gr2: 100% Gr3: 94%At 17.3 yr FU: Gr1: 129 (61–270) Gr2: 235 (125–445) Gr3: 354 (143–880)COI: none
Raczniak et al. 2013 (Vaccine)56 USHavrix˜ 720 EU or Vaqta˜ 720 EU 2 doses (0, 6–12 mo) Age at 1st vacc: 1–4 yrs (50.5%), 5–9 yrs (31.7%), >10 yrs (17.8%)Alaska Native children101 at start, 57 at ≥11 yrs FUdAt ≥11 yrs FU, %≥20 mIU/mL: 95%≥13 to <15 yrs FU, by age at first dosef: 1–2 yrs (n=5): 21 (6–77) 3–6 yrs (n=5): 80 (40–159) ≥7 yrs (n=1): 81Participants were evaluated for follow-up only once (i.e. those evaluated before 11 years not counted in follow-up) COI: none
Spradling et al. 2016 [ref] USHavrix˜ 720EU 2 doses (0 and 6 mo) Age at 1st vacc (randomly allocated): Gr1: 6 mo Gr2: 12 mo Gr 3: 15 moChildren who participated in immunogenicity study; enrolled from prenatal and pediatric clinics in Anchorage. Ineligible for long-term follow-up if received additional dose of HA vaccine (n=11)Gr1: at start, 38 (20+, 18-) at 15–16 yrs of age Gr2: at start, 26 (17+, 9-) at 15–16 yrs of age Gr3: at start, 31 (19+, 12-) at 15–16 yrs of ageAt 15–16 yrs of age, %>20 mIU/mL: Gr1-: 75% Gr1+: 61% Gr2-: 100% Gr+: 67% Gr3-: 100% Gr3+: 67%At 15–16 yrs of age: Gr1-: 49 (31–77) Gr1+: 27 (16–44) Gr2-: 78 (49–123) Gr2+: 35 (14–87) Gr3-: 58 (37–90) Gr3+: 50 (24–103)COI: none
Fiore et al. 200353 USHavrix˜ 360 EUd 3 doses (0, 2, 4 mo) Age at 1st vacc: 2 moInfants in immunogenicity trial who responded to primary series Children who had received additional doses of HA vaccine since the 1991 study excluded (n=n.r.)78 at start, 48 (31-, 17+) at 6.1 yrs FUgAt 6.1 yrs FU, %≥33 mIU/mL: -: 68% +: 24%At 6.1 yrs FU: -: 50 (31–81) +: 18 (10–32)SmithKline Beecham Biological

CI: confidence interval; COI: conflict of interest; EU: ELISA units; FU: follow-up; Gr: group; HA: hepatitis A; HAV: hepatitis A virus; mo: months; n.r.: not reported; RCV: routine childhood vaccines; U: antigen units vacc: vaccination; yr(s): years;

+ and – refer to maternal anti-HAV antibody status

Only industry-related COI, funding source or financial disclosures reported

After first dose

After second dose

This formulation is no longer available

≥11 to <13 yrs FU, GMC by age at first dose: 1–2 yrs (n=26): 98 (66–147); 3–6 yrs (n=8): 298 (51–1749); ≥7 yrs (n=11): 211 (112–397). ≥15 years FU, age at first dose 3–6 yrs (n=1): 43 mIU/mL

After third dose

Long-term persistence of anti-hepatitis A antibodies. CI: confidence interval; COI: conflict of interest; EU: ELISA units; FU: follow-up; Gr: group; HA: hepatitis A; HAV: hepatitis A virus; mo: months; n.r.: not reported; RCV: routine childhood vaccines; U: antigen units vacc: vaccination; yr(s): years; + and – refer to maternal anti-HAV antibody status Only industry-related COI, funding source or financial disclosures reported After first dose After second dose This formulation is no longer available ≥11 to <13 yrs FU, GMC by age at first dose: 1–2 yrs (n=26): 98 (66–147); 3–6 yrs (n=8): 298 (51–1749); ≥7 yrs (n=11): 211 (112–397). ≥15 years FU, age at first dose 3–6 yrs (n=1): 43 mIU/mL After third dose The vaccination schedule, the number of doses, the antibody-status of the mother and age at vaccination were all found to influence the height of the geometric mean concentration (GMC) of anti-HAV antibodies. In the study with the longest follow-up, children who received the third dose of hepatitis A vaccine at month 12 compared to month 2 of the vaccination schedule had a higher GMC after 17 y (354 mIU/mL [95%CI 142–880] vs.129 mIU/mL [95%CI 61–270]). In another study, the GMC at 5 y follow-up was significantly higher among those who had received 2 doses of hepatitis A vaccine compared to those who had received only one dose (592 mIU/mL [95%CI 480–729] vs. 123 mIU/mL [95%CI 111–135]). In 2 studies, the presence of maternal antibodies was significantly associated with lower GMCs at 6 and 15 y follow-up among infants vaccinated at aged 2 and 6 months, respectively. One of these studies also showed that the GMC was higher among children vaccinated at age 12 or 18 months compared to those aged 6 months.

Discussion

In 2012, Ott et al. reviewed the literature on the long-term protective effect of hepatitis A vaccines, and new studies have been published since then. To our knowledge, the present communication is the first systematic review that examines the overall impact of universal mass vaccination with inactivated hepatitis A vaccines.

Impact of UMV programs

The goal of the hepatitis A UMV programs in countries with intermediate endemicity for HAV is to protect individuals from infection and disease and reducing the virus circulation. Most UMV programs are aimed at very young children, as they represent the reservoir of the infection representing an important vehicle in the transmission of HAV. UMV programs are generally based on 2-dose vaccination, however Argentina and Brazil have decided to introduce a one dose only program. This review focused only on countrywide UMV with monovalent inactivated vaccines. In China, hepatitis A vaccination was introduced into the routine childhood program in 2008. However, as 92% of the 16 million children aged 18 months are vaccinated annually with a single dose of live attenuated vaccines, data from China was beyond the scope of this review. Likewise, some areas implemented vaccination only in a particular region of a country (e.g. Puglia, Italy; or Catalonia, Spain where a combined hepatitis A and B vaccine was used) or only in one city (e.g., Minsk, Belarus), and were not included. All but one of the reviewed studies that looked at incidence of acute hepatitis A showed a marked decline in the incidence after the introduction of hepatitis A UMV programs in countries with intermediate levels of endemicity defined elsewhere. However reductions in the rate of transmission are also attributable to the improved hygiene resulting from cleaned water access. It has been in fact shown that Hepatitis A virus (HAV) is associated with inadequate water and sanitation, the increases in clean water access lead to reduced risk of waterborne HAV transmission. The incidence in non-vaccinated age groups was also found to decrease, likely indicating a strong impact of vaccination programs on herd immunity. However an increase in the proportion of acute hepatitis A cases hospitalized in the United States was reported and this could be explained by the increase in age of the susceptible population which is predominantly adults more prone to clinically overt and severe disease. Greece is the only country where the introduction of UMV for hepatitis A did not show a strong impact on the incidence of hepatitis A, as reported in other countries. Differently than in other countries the UMV in Greece was implemented when already at least a third of children on a national level had been vaccinate in the private market and specifically data from Athens metropolitan area showed a vaccine uptake >50% prior to the UMV introduction. The low impact of UMV showed in Greece is likely due to the fact that Greece was already a country with low endemicity at the time UMV was introduced, and that children in the main high risk group, the Roma population, are not vaccinated at the recommended level to prevent transmission. The evaluation of the impact of hepatitis A vaccination has been carried out mostly using national or state-wide passive surveillance systems, based primarily on laboratory-confirmed or epidemiologically-linked cases of acute hepatitis A, and 2 Israeli studies used health insurance organization data. None of the systems ascertained asymptomatic infections or those with acute hepatitis A disease that did not seek medical care. None of the authors reported any changes in underreporting over time. If these factors had any effect on the outcome, it is likely they led to an underestimation of the reduction in acute hepatitis A, rather than an overestimation. Outbreaks have often been the direct trigger for the introduction of UMV programs, such as the 2003–2004 outbreaks in Argentina. In some areas, the overall incidence of acute hepatitis A was already declining in the decade prior to the introduction of routine vaccination programs, but maintained its cyclic pattern. For example, Singleton et al. state that increasing rates of in-home running water perhaps contributed to somewhat lower HAV incidence in the later pre-licensure period in Alaska. However, the decline in incidence after the introduction of UMV was unprecedented in magnitude. No major changes in water or sanitation infrastructure were reported that coincided with the introduction of UMV and to which the decrease could be attributed. Furthermore the decline can't be entirely explained by the cyclical nature of the disease, as the decline was accompanied by shifts in the relative age distribution of acute hepatitis A to older age groups and declines were larger in vaccinating than non-vaccinating states of the US. Finally, epidemic peaks have been disappearing. The decline in incidence was sustained over time; studies in this review included up to 8 y of data post-UMV introduction, during which no increase in acute hepatitis A incidence was observed. Vaccination coverage varied widely among geographical areas; reaching over 95% of young children in Argentina, but only 25% in US states where vaccination was “considered” from 1999. Efforts to target children at highest risk in certain areas of the US might explain the high impact of UMV despite this low vaccination coverage. The impact of UMV on acute hepatitis A incidence was evident despite limited vaccine coverage rates in some countries. Due to the heterogeneity of the data, meta-analysis was not performed. The periods compared in the before vs. after comparison differ too much between the studies, especially in terms of years since the introduction of UMV. Additionally, Vizzotti et al describes a 1-dose vaccination program while the other publications refer to 2-dose vaccination programs. As with any systematic literature review, this review is subject to the limitations of the included articles. Almost all included studies showed a decline in the incidence following the introduction of hepatitis A UMV programs. As these studies were conducted in settings with intermediate endemicity, the results should be interpreted within this context and differences in the surveillance systems should also been considered when interpreting the data. In the study from Greece, a country with low endemicity, no such decline was seen. Improved hygiene over the past century has led to low endemicity in much of the developed world. The resulting high susceptibility may increase the risk of outbreaks when exposure does occur, and this has been the cause of recent large outbreaks through food contamination, e.g. through frozen pomegranate arils in the United States and frozen berries in Europe. However, this does not necessarily indicate that mass immunization programs with hepatitis A vaccine should be introduced in low endemic countries.

Long-term persistence

In this review, evidence of long-term persistence of anti-HAV (IgG) antibodies in children for up to 17 y following vaccination with monovalent inactivated vaccines was found. However, these data have been generated following vaccination with 3 doses of an inactivated Hepatitis A vaccine containing 360 EU per dose (HAVRIX˜ 360 EU), not used anymore. Long-term immune memory is important so that children vaccinated under childhood vaccination programs will still be protected by the time they reach the age at which disease is likely to be symptomatic. Infants vaccinated before the age of one year appear to have a lower antibody response. This supports the target age of one year or older for children immunized in UMV programs. A recent model-based assessment of vaccine induced immune memory against HAV in adults suggests that anti-HAV antibodies will persist for at least 20 y in >95% of vaccines. A limitation in interpretation of most long-term persistence studies is that a fraction of the children that received the primary vaccination series also received an additional booster dose before the last follow-up. Indeed, boosters complicate the interpretation of follow-up data. For instance, 5 of the included studies reported that children who received booster doses were excluded; this results in an overestimation in the GMCs and the percentage of children who were seropositive years after the primary vaccination series, as boosters were likely given to precisely those children whose antibodies levels dropped below a certain threshold. The interpretation is further hampered by the fact that most studies did not report how many children were excluded for this reason. For these studies, it can be concluded that anti-HAV-antibodies can persist up to the time of last follow-up (6 to 14–15 years). For the 2 studies that did report how many children were excluded due to the receipt of a booster dose, it can be concluded that antibodies persist to the time of last follow-up (5 and 17 y) in the majority of children who were not lost to follow-up. A limitation of all studies on long-term persistence of antibodies and immune memory is the large number of participants that were lost to follow-up over time. Additionally, the possibility that the children received a ‘natural booster’ due to exposure to circulating HAV cannot be excluded, especially in the early years of the vaccination programs. However, there is also no proof that the long-term persistence of antibodies was the result of natural boosting. Furthermore, seroprotection against HAV was defined as a GMC of at least 5, 10, 20, or 33 mIU/mL depending on individual assays and vaccines used in the included studies. However, the true lowest limit of anti-HAV that confers protection is unknown and might be even lower than the detection limit of a particular assay. Information on long-term persistence after administration of a single dose of vaccine in children is limited, but has been documented in adults. This information would suggest that protective anti-HAV antibody levels after a single dose of inactivated hepatitis A vaccine can persist for up to 11 y. A recent publication also suggests that antibody titers are lower and antibodies decay faster in younger children (aged 1–7 years). Long-term persistence data after one dose in children would therefore be valuable, especially as not all children are vaccinated twice, either because the second dose is missed or because only one dose is recommended, e.g., in Argentina and Brazil. The impact on the disease incidence and other related health outcomes as well as the long term antibody persistence provided by the vaccination are all critical considerations of vaccine program impact, however every country must also assess the cost-effectiveness of the program in deciding for or against the implementation of hepatitis A UMV. The data reported present certain heterogeneity in terms of epidemiology and reporting systems and therefore the data should not be read as a comparison of the impact of immunization programs in the different country but solely as a descriptive assessment of the country by country outcomes.

Conclusion

Introduction of UMV with monovalent inactivated hepatitis A vaccines in countries with intermediate endemicity for HAV infection led to a considerable decrease in the incidence of hepatitis A in vaccinated and in non-vaccinated age groups alike.
  67 in total

1.  Inactivated hepatitis A vaccine booster given >/=24 months after the primary dose.

Authors:  P Landry; S Tremblay; R Darioli; B Genton
Journal:  Vaccine       Date:  2000-10-15       Impact factor: 3.641

2.  Excellent booster response 4 to 8 years after a single primary dose of an inactivated hepatitis A vaccine.

Authors:  Sten Iwarson; Magnus Lindh; Lena Widerström
Journal:  J Travel Med       Date:  2004 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 8.490

Review 3.  Prevention of hepatitis A by Havrix: a review.

Authors:  Koen Van Herck; Pierre Van Damme
Journal:  Expert Rev Vaccines       Date:  2005-08       Impact factor: 5.217

4.  The role of young children in a community-wide outbreak of hepatitis A.

Authors:  P F Smith; J C Grabau; A Werzberger; R A Gunn; H R Rolka; S F Kondracki; R J Gallo; D L Morse
Journal:  Epidemiol Infect       Date:  1997-06       Impact factor: 2.451

5.  Hepatitis A hospitalizations in the United States, 2002-2011.

Authors:  Melissa G Collier; Xin Tong; Fujie Xu
Journal:  Hepatology       Date:  2015-02       Impact factor: 17.425

6.  Incidence of hepatitis A in the United States in the era of vaccination.

Authors:  Annemarie Wasley; Taraz Samandari; Beth P Bell
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2005-07-13       Impact factor: 56.272

7.  Prevention of hepatitis A through active or passive immunization: Recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP)

Authors: 
Journal:  MMWR Recomm Rep       Date:  1996-12-27

Review 8.  Prevention of hepatitis A by vaccination.

Authors:  Elisabetta Franco; Cristina Giambi; Rita Ialacci; Massimo Maurici
Journal:  Expert Opin Biol Ther       Date:  2003-09       Impact factor: 4.388

9.  The diverse patterns of hepatitis A epidemiology in the United States-implications for vaccination strategies.

Authors:  B P Bell; C N Shapiro; M J Alter; L A Moyer; F N Judson; K Mottram; M Fleenor; P L Ryder; H S Margolis
Journal:  J Infect Dis       Date:  1998-12       Impact factor: 5.226

Review 10.  Live attenuated hepatitis A vaccines developed in China.

Authors:  Zhi-Yi Xu; Xuan-Yi Wang
Journal:  Hum Vaccin Immunother       Date:  2013-11-26       Impact factor: 3.452

View more
  18 in total

Review 1.  The History of Hepatitis A.

Authors:  Daniel Shouval
Journal:  Clin Liver Dis (Hoboken)       Date:  2020-10-07

Review 2.  Immunization against Hepatitis A.

Authors:  Daniel Shouval
Journal:  Cold Spring Harb Perspect Med       Date:  2019-02-01       Impact factor: 6.915

3.  Modeling the hepatitis A epidemiological transition in Brazil and Mexico.

Authors:  Thierry Van Effelterre; Adrienne Guignard; Cinzia Marano; Rosalba Rojas; Kathryn H Jacobsen
Journal:  Hum Vaccin Immunother       Date:  2017-05-08       Impact factor: 3.452

Review 4.  Immunizations in Athletes.

Authors:  Christopher D Boston; Jennifer J Bryan
Journal:  Sports Health       Date:  2018-07-30       Impact factor: 3.843

5.  Hepatitis A virus infections, immunisations and demographic determinants in children and adolescents, Germany.

Authors:  Kai Michaelis; Christina Poethko-Müller; Ronny Kuhnert; Klaus Stark; Mirko Faber
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-11-12       Impact factor: 4.379

6.  Early use of the HPV 2-dose vaccination schedule: Leveraging evidence to support policy for accelerated impact.

Authors:  Vladimir Gilca; Jorge Salmerón-Castro; Chantal Sauvageau; Gina Ogilvie; Monique Landry; Monica Naus; Eduardo Lazcano-Ponce
Journal:  Vaccine       Date:  2018-06-07       Impact factor: 3.641

7.  Viral hepatitis and Treponema pallidum prevalence in persons who underwent premarital blood tests in Argentina.

Authors:  Patricia Angeleri; Valeria Levite; Gabriela Vidiella; Joaquín Solari; Emma Coronel; Dan Adaszko; Ariel Adaszko; Cecilia Moyano; Diosnel Bouchet; Héctor Cuello; Viviana Molfese; Rosario Skarzauskas; Marcelo Vila; Carlos Falistocco; Maria A Pando
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2019-07-03       Impact factor: 4.379

Review 8.  Hepatitis A vaccination and its immunological and epidemiological long-term effects - a review of the evidence.

Authors:  Christian Herzog; Koen Van Herck; Pierre Van Damme
Journal:  Hum Vaccin Immunother       Date:  2020-12-16       Impact factor: 3.452

9.  Universal Single-Dose Vaccination against Hepatitis A in Children in a Region of High Endemicity.

Authors:  Mikhail I Mikhailov; Maria A Lopatukhina; Fedor A Asadi Mobarhan; Lyudmila Yu Ilchenko; Tatyana V Kozhanova; Olga V Isaeva; Anastasiya A Karlsen; Ilya A Potemkin; Vera S Kichatova; Anna A Saryglar; Natalia D Oorzhak; Karen K Kyuregyan
Journal:  Vaccines (Basel)       Date:  2020-12-20

10.  Immunogenicity persistence in children of hepatitis A vaccines Healive® and Havrix®: 11 years follow-up and long-term prediction.

Authors:  Yongji Wang; Yangyang Qi; Wenguo Xu; Yuansheng Hu; Ling Wang; Yongpei Yu; Zhiwei Jiang; Jielai Xia; Gang Zeng; Yalong Wang
Journal:  Hum Vaccin Immunother       Date:  2020-02-10       Impact factor: 3.452

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.