| Literature DB >> 28821521 |
Ludovic Casanova1,2,3, Sébastien Cortaredona1,2, Jean Gaudart1, Odile Launay4,5, Philippe Vanhems4,6, Patrick Villani1,2, Pierre Verger1,2,4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Seasonal influenza vaccination (SIV) is recommended for people with diabetes, but its effectiveness has not been demonstrated. All of the available studies are observational and marred with the healthy vaccine bias, that is, bias resulting from the generally better health behaviours practised by people who choose to be vaccinated against influenza, compared with those who do not. This protocol is intended to study the effectiveness of SIV in people with treated diabetes and simultaneously to control for bias. METHODS AND ANALYSES: This case-control study is nested in a historical cohort and is designed to study vaccine effectiveness (VE) assessed by morbidity, mortality and anti-infective drug use. The cohort will comprise a representative sample of health insurance beneficiaries in France and will cover 10 consecutive epidemic seasons. It will include all patients reimbursed three separate times for drugs to treat diabetes. The first study of VE will use reasons for hospitalisation as the primary end point, and the second with the use of neuraminidase inhibitors and of antibiotics as the end points. A case will be defined as any person in the cohort reaching any end point at a given date. The case patient will be matched with the largest possible number of controls (individuals not reaching the end point by this date) according to the propensity score method with an optimal calliper width. A conditional logistic model will be used to estimate ORs to take into account both the matching and the repetition of measurements. The model will be applied separately during and outside of epidemic periods to estimate the residual confounding. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The study has been approved by the French Commission on Individual Data Protection and Public Liberties (ref: AT/CPZ/SVT/JB/DP/CR05222O). The study's findings will be published in peer-reviewed journals and disseminated at international conferences and through social media. © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2017. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.Entities:
Keywords: diabetes mellitus; influenza vaccines; nested case-control; propensity score; protocol
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28821521 PMCID: PMC5629692 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-016023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Description of the 10 study years: the date the vaccination campaign began, the characteristics of the epidemic and the control periods
| Year | Campaign start date* | Epidemic period | Control period | ||||||
| Start | End | Duration | Peak† | Serotypes‡ | Start | End | |||
| 1 | 2006/2007 | 12/10/06 | 2007 w03 | 2007 w09 | 7 | 2007 w06 | AH3N2 | 2007 w18 | 2007 w30 |
| 3 | 2008/2009 | 10/10/08 | 2008 w51 | 2009 w08 | 10 | 2009 w04 | AH3N2 | 2009 w18 | 2009 w30 |
| 4 | 2009/2010 | 01/09/09 | 2009 w37 | 2009 w52 | 16 | 2009 w49 | AH1N1 | 2010 w18 | 2010 w30 |
| 5 | 2010/2011 | 24/09/10 | 2010 w51 | 2011 w07 | 9 | 2011 w01 | AH1N1 | 2011 w18 | 2011 w30 |
| 6 | 2011/2012 | 29/09/11 | 2012 w05 | 2012 w12 | 8 | 2012 w08 | AH3N2 | 2012 w18 | 2012 w30 |
| 7 | 2012/2013 | 28/09/12 | 2012 w51 | 2013 w11 | 13 | 2013 w05 | AH1N1/B | 2013 w18 | 2013 w30 |
| 8 | 2013/2014 | 11/10/13 | 2014 w05 | 2014 w10 | 6 | 2014 w07 | AH1N1/AH3N2 | 2014 w18 | 2014 w30 |
| 9 | 2014/2015 | 16/10/14 | 2015 s03 | 2015 s11 | 9 | 2015 s06 | AH3N2 | 2015 w18 | 2015 w30 |
| 10 | 2015/20165 | 15/10/15 | 2016 s04 | 2016 s14 | 11 | 2016 s11 | B | 2016 w18 | 2016 w30 |
*Established by an official communiqué of the National Health Insurance Fund and the Ministry of Health.
†Weeks of maximum incidence.
‡Serotypes: Dominant or codominant virus types and subtypes circulating during the season. This information is based on variable numbers of samples and uses virus detection techniques of different sensitivity. Moreover, several definitions of codominance may have been used, and this information is provided as a rough guide.
List of ICD-10-CA codes included in the administrative case definition of influenza-like illness*
| Diagnosis* | ICD-10 code |
| Sinusitis | J01 or J32 |
| Upper respiratory tract infection | J06.8 or J06.9 |
| Influenza | J09 J10 or J11 |
| Viral pneumonia | J12 |
| Acute bronchitis or bronchitis NOS or obstructive bronchitis | J20 or J40 or J44.8 |
| Bronchiolitis | J21 |
| Acute lower respiratory tract infection, not otherwise specified | J22 |
| COPD with acute lower respiratory tract infection (includes pneumonia) | J44.0 |
| COPD with acute exacerbation | J441 |
| Pleurisy | R09.1 |
| Pneumonia | J13 or J14 or |
| Pneumonia, organism unspecified | J18 |
*Developed using pilot data from emergency departments in Edmonton, Alberta. ICD codes were extracted from randomly selected cases comprising 15% of all emergency department visits with a main ambulatory care diagnosis of influenza.
COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; ICD-10, 10th revision of the International Classification of Diseases; NOS, not otherwise specified.