| Literature DB >> 27786671 |
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
Figure 1.Flowchart of the selection procedure.
Effect of universal mass vaccination programs for hepatitis A on incidence of acute hepatitis A.
| Vaccination | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author; country | Start UMV; Target age | Vaccine coverage | Vaccine | Data source of hepatitis A cases | Years compared (before vs with UMV) | Incidence (95%CI) per 100,000 population | Decline (%) | Comments |
| Single-dose immunization strategy | ||||||||
| Vizzotti et al. 2013 | 2005 1 yr | 96.8% for 2006–2011 | Havrix˜ 720EU, Vaqta™ 25U, Avaxim˜ 80U, Virohep-A Junior 12UI | Early Alert Module, National Health Surveillance System; passive clinical surveillance | 2000–2002 vs. 2006–2011 | 66.5 vs. 7.9 | 88.1 | –Source and year of denominator data n.r. –COI: none |
| Two-dose immunization strategy | ||||||||
| Mellou et al. 2014 | 2008 >12 mo | VC with 1 dose among 3 yr old children 80%, with 2 doses 42% in 2013 | n.r | National surveillance data | 2007 vs. 2013 | 2–3 vs. 2 | – | COI: none |
| Chodick et al. 2008 | 1999 18 mo | Received at least 1 dose:-<5 yrs: 9% (1999), 89% (2007)-5–14 yrs: 15% (1999), 68% (2007) | Havrix˜ 720EU | Maccabi Healthcare Services; health maintenance organization | 1998 vs. 2007 | 142.4 vs. 7.6 | 95.0 | –MHS not representative of the general population (higher socio-economic class) (Daniel Shouval, personal communication, February 23, 2015) –COI: none |
| Levine et al. 2015 | 1999 18 mo | VC for vaccines given in 2003–2010 : 92% (dose 1), 88% (dose 2) | Havrix˜ 720EU | Cases reported to the national surveillance system | 1993–1998 vs. 2008–2012 | 50.4 (35.9–64.9) vs. < 1.0 | >98 | COI: none |
| Estripeaut et al. 2015 | 2007 > 12 mo | VC 1 dose 70.7% and 1 dose 40.1% in 2010 | Havrix˜ 720EU | National surveillance systems | 2000–2006 vs. 2010 | 51.1 vs. 3.7 | 93 | GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals SA |
| Romero et al. 2012 | 2007 vaccination of children 1–5 yrs old In 2008 >12 mo | VC 1 dose 74% | n.r. | National surveillance system | 2005 vs. 2010 | 69.6 vs. 2.7 | 96 | COI: n.r. |
| Erhart et al. 2012 | 1999 | VC with 1 dose (by age): −24–59 mo: 36% (2000), 65% (2006) −5–9 yrs: 24% (2000), 77% (2006) | Havrix˜ 720EU, Vaqta˜ 25U | Arizona Department of Health Services and local public health departments; passive surveillance | 1994–1995 vs. 2006–2007 | 41 (41–42) vs. 2.6 (2.5–2.7) | 94 | –Year of denominator data n.r –COI: n.r. |
| Ly et al. 2015 | 1999 | n.r. | Havrix˜ 720EU, Vaqta˜ 25U | National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System | 1999 vs. 2011 | 6.0 vs. 0.4 | 93 | COI: none |
| Singleton et al. 2010 | 1999 | 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˜ 25U | Alaska Section of Epidemiology; surveillance | 1994–1995 vs. 2002–2007 | 22.2 vs. 0.9 | 95.9 | COI: n.r. |
| Wasley et al. 2005 | 1999 | VC 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˜ 25U | National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System; passive national surveillance | 1990–1997 vs. 2003 | 10.7 vs. 2.6 | 76 | COI: 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 other outcome measures.
| Vaccination | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author; country | Start UMV; Target age | Vaccine coverage | Brand, EU, doses | Data source | Outcome | Years compared | Before UMV | With UMV | Comments |
| Single-dose immunization strategy | |||||||||
| Vizzotti et al. 2013 | 2005 1 yr | 96.8% for 2006–2011 | Havrix˜ 720EU, Vaqta˜ 25U, Avaxim˜ 80U, Virohep-A-Junior 12UI | 4 pediatric centers in Buenos Aires and Unique Central National Institute of Ablation and Implant | Number of cases of HA-associated fulminant hepatic failure cases per year | 2000–2003 vs. 2008–2011 | ∼17.5 | 0 | No case definition of fulminant hepatic failure COI: none |
| Two-dose immunization strategy | |||||||||
| Papaevangelou et al. 2016 [ref] Athens, Greece | 2008 1 yr | 88% (dose 1), 82% (dose 2) among children aged 6 yrs in 2012 | n.r. | Infectious Disease Unit of a Tertiary Pediatric Hospital | HA hospital admission per 1000 admission among children aged 0–14 yrs | 1999–2008 vs. 2009–2013 | 50.5 (95%CI 29.2–67.1) | 20.8 (95%CI 19.2–30.1) | –COI: none |
| Belmaker et al. 2007 | 1999 18 mo | Birth cohort 2000, by age 3 yrs: 86.4% (dose 1), 77.3% (dose 2) | Havrix˜ 720EU | Treating physicians, medical laboratories, Ministry of Education, concerned parents | Yearly average of HA cases associated with outbreaks in day care and school settings | 1993–1999 vs. 2001–2005 | 45.6 | 0 | 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. 2014 | 1999 | n.r. | Havrix˜ 720EU, Vaqta˜ 25U | National Inpatient Survey discharge data (∼20% of all community hospital discharges) | Hospitalizations for HA illness as principal diagnosis per 100,000 persons | 2004–2005 vs. 2010–2011 | 0.64 | 0.29 | Source and year of denominator data n.r. COI: none |
| Ly et al. 2014 | 1999 | n.r. | n.r | National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System and Multiple Cause of death | % of HA-cases that was hospitalized; and HA-related mortality per 100,000 population | 1999 vs. 2011 | 7.3; 0.1 | 24.5; 0.02 | COI: none |
| Vogt et al. 2008 | 1999 2 yrs | n.r. | Havrix˜ 720EU, Vaqta˜ 25U | CDC's National Center for Health Statistics | Age-adjusted HA mortality rate per 1 million personsh | 1990–1995 vs. 2000–2004 | 0.51 | 0.28 | –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. 2007 | 1999 2 yrs | 2004, children aged 2 yrs: 30.0%(in-plan vaccination rate) | Havrix˜ 720EU, Vaqta˜ 25U | Medstat MarketScan database | HA-related ambulatory visits per 100,000 MarketScan enrollees | 1996–1997 vs. 2004 | 20.9 | 8.7 | –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
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; Country | Years compared (before UMV vs. with UMV) | Target age at 1st dose | Age groups with children younger than target age UMV program | Age groups with most vaccinated children | Other age groups | Oldest age groups |
| Vizzotti et al. 2014 | 2000–2002 vs. 2006–2011 | 1 yr | Age < 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. 2005 | 1993–1998 vs 2002–2004 | 1 yr | Age < 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. 2015 | 2000–2006 vs.2010 | 12–18 mo | Age < 1: 100.0% | Age 1–4: 95.1 | Age 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. 2015 | 1999 vs. 2011 | 1 yr | Age <1: n.r. | Age 0–19: 95.9% | — | Age 20–39: 93.1% |
| Wasley et al. 2005 | 1990–1997 vs. 2003 | 2 yrs | Age < 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.
Long-term persistence of anti-hepatitis A antibodies.
| Author Country | Intervention | Population | Number of participants | Outcome | Outcome | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Espul et al. 2014 | Avaxim˜ 80U Pediatric Gr1: 1 dose Gr2: 2 doses (schedule n.r.) Age at 1st vacc: 11–23 mo | Healthy 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 FU | At 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. 2015 | Avaxim˜ 80U Pediatric 2 doses (0, 6 mo) | Healthy children ≤ 15 years of age Ineligible for follow-up analyses if received additional dose of HA vaccine | 54 at start, 30 at 14–15 yr FU | At 14–15 yr FU, %≥20 mIU/mL 100.0% | At 14–15 yr FU: 253 (181–353) | Sanofi Pasteur |
| Van Herck et al. 2015 | Gr 1: Epaxal˜ Junior Gr2: Epaxal˜ Gr3: Havrix˜ 720 EU 2 doses (0, 6 mo) | Healthy subjects | Gr1: 121 at start, 85 at 5.5 yr FU | At 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. 2010 | Havrix˜ 720 EU 2 doses (0, 6 mo) Mean age at 1st vacc: 2.1 yrs | Children from Zhenhai District and Beilum District | 200 at start, 110 at 10 yr FU | At 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] China | Gr1: Healive 250 U Gr2: Havrix˜ 720 EU(randomly allocated) 2 doses (0, 6 mo) | Healthy children | Gr1: 300 at start, 230 at 5 yr FU | At 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] Israel | Gr1: 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 mo | Healthy children No HA vacc given during follow-up. | Gr1: 112 at start, 50 at 7.5 yr FU | At 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) | Havrix˜ 360 EU | Alaska 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 FU | At 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) | Havrix˜ 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 children | 101 at start, 57 at ≥11 yrs FU | At ≥11 yrs FU, %≥20 mIU/mL: 95% | ≥13 to <15 yrs FU, by age at first dose | Participants 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] US | Havrix˜ 720EU 2 doses (0 and 6 mo) Age at 1st vacc (randomly allocated): Gr1: 6 mo Gr2: 12 mo Gr 3: 15 mo | Children 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 age | At 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. 2003 | Havrix˜ 360 EU | Infants 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 FU | At 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