| Literature DB >> 28823248 |
Lauren C Ramsay1, Sarah A Buchan2, Robert G Stirling2,3, Benjamin J Cowling4, Shuo Feng4, Jeffrey C Kwong1,2,5,6,7, Bryna F Warshawsky8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Conflicting results regarding the impact of repeated vaccination on influenza vaccine effectiveness (VE) may cause confusion regarding the benefits of receiving the current season's vaccine.Entities:
Keywords: Influenza; Repeated vaccination; Vaccine effectiveness
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28823248 PMCID: PMC5563917 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-017-0919-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram of study selection
Study characteristics of articles included in the meta-analysis and/or qualitative synthesis
| Author, year, reference | Country | Study design | Current season | Prior season | Influenza type | Age group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jimenez-Jorge et al., 2012 [ | Spain | Test-negative case-control | 2010–2011 | 2009–2010 | H1N1 | All ages |
| Martinez-Baz et al., 2013 [ | Spain | Test-negative case-control | 2010–2011 | 2009–2010 | H1N1 | All ages |
| Savulescu et al., 2011 [ | Spain | Test-negative case-control | 2010–2011 | 2009–2010 | H1N1 | All ages |
| Skowronski et al., 2012 [ | Canada | Test-negative case-control | 2010–2011 | 2009–2010 | H1N1 | All ages |
| Syrjanen et al., 2014 [ | Finland | Cohort | 2010–2011 | 2009–2010 | H1N1 | 18–75 years |
| Fu et al., 2015 [ | China | Case-control | 2012–2013 | 2011–2012 | H1N1 | a) 20–35 months, 1 current dose; b) 20–35 months, 2 current doses; c) 3–6 years |
| Gaglani et al., 2016a [ | United States | Test-negative case-control | 2013–2014 | 2009–2010 to 2012–2013 | H1N1 | ≥9 years |
| Ohmit et al., 2016 [ | United States | Prospective cohort study | 2013–2014 | 2012–2013 | H1N1 | a) 9 and older; b) under 9 years |
| Thompson et al., 2014b [ | United States | Case-control | 2010–2011 and 2012–2013 | 2009–2010 and 2010–2011 | H1N1, H3N2, B | Mean age 30 years |
| Skowronski et al., 2014 [ | Canada | Test-negative case-control | 2011–2012 | 2010–2011 | H1N1, H3N2, B | ≥2 years |
| Rondy et al., 2015 [ | France, Italy, Lithuania, Spain | Test-negative case-control | 2012–2013 | 2011–2012 | H1N1, H3N2, B | ≥18 years |
| Skowronski et al., 2014 [ | Canada | Test-negative case-control | 2012–2013 | 2011–2012 | H1N1, H3N2, B | ≥2 years |
| Valenciano et al., 2016 [ | Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Spain | Test-negative case-control | 2014–2015 | 2013–2014 | H1N1, H3N2, B | All ages |
| Pebody et al., 2013 [ | United Kingdom | Test-negative case-control | 2010–2011 | 2009–2010 | H1N1, B | All ages |
| Skowronski et al., 2015 [ | Canada | Test-negative case-control | 2013–2014 | 2012–2013 | H1N1, B | ≥2 years |
| McLean et al., 2014 [ | United States | Test-negative case-control | 2004–2005 to 2012–2013 | Variable | H3N2, B | a) 9–49; b) 50 and older |
| McLean et al., 2015 [ | United States | Test-negative case-control | 2012–2013 | 2011–2012 | H3N2, B | a) 9–17; b) 18–49; c) 50–64; d) 65 and older |
| Thompson et al., 2016 [ | United States | Test-negative case-control | 2012–2013 | 2011–2012 | H3N2, B | a) 2–8 years, 1 dose prior season; b) 2–8 years, 2 doses prior season |
| Skowronski et al., 2016 [ | Canada | Test-negative case-control | 2014–2015 | 2013–2014 | H3N2, B | ≥2 years |
| Simpson et al., 2015a [ | Scotland | Test-negative case-control | 2008–2009 | 9 prior seasons | All influenza | All ages |
| Castilla et al., 2011a [ | Spain | Nested test-negative case- control | 2010–2011 | 2009–2010 | All influenza | All ages |
| Ohmit et al., 2014 [ | United States | Test-negative case-control | 2011–2012 | 2010–2011 | H3N2 | ≥9 years |
| Ohmit et al., 2015a [ | United States | Prospective cohort study | 2012–2013 | 2011–2012 | All influenza | All ages |
| Smithgall et al., 2016a [ | United States | Surveillance | 2013–2014 | 2012–2013 | All influenza | All ages |
| Castilla et al., 2016a [ | Spain | Test-negative case-control | 2014–2015 | 2013–2014 and 2012–2013 | All influenza | All ages |
| Sullivan & Kelly, 2013a [ | Australia | Re-analysis | a) Southern hemisphere 2011; b) Southern hemisphere 2012 | Southern hemisphere 2010 and 2011 | All influenza | All ages |
| Petrie et al., 2016 [ | United States | Test-negative case-control | 2014–2015 | 2013–2014 | H3N2 | ≥18 years |
aStudy not included in meta-analysis
bStudy population included pregnant women only
Comparison of vaccine effectiveness (VE) by vaccination group and influenza type/subtype
| VE comparison | Relevance of results | H1N1 | H3N2 | B |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vaccinated both seasons versus vaccinated prior season only | Patient and policy perspectives |
| 10% (–6% to 25%) |
|
| Vaccinated current season only versus vaccinated neither season (reference group) | Patient and policy perspectives |
|
|
|
| Vaccinated both seasons versus vaccinated current season only | Policy perspective | 4% (–7% to 15%) | –12% (–27% to 4%) | –8% (–17% to 1%) |
Bold type-face indicates significant results
aΔVE > 0 implies higher vaccine effectiveness estimate when vaccinated in both seasons
Fig. 2Comparison of vaccine effectiveness (VE) estimates against influenza H1N1 in those vaccinated in both seasons versus those vaccinated in the prior season only
Fig. 3Comparison of vaccine effectiveness (VE) estimates against influenza H3N2 in those vaccinated in both seasons versus those vaccinated in the prior season only
Fig. 4Comparison of vaccine effectiveness (VE) estimates against influenza B in those vaccinated in both seasons versus those vaccinated in the prior season only
Fig. 5Comparison of vaccine effectiveness (VE) estimates against influenza H1N1 in those vaccinated in the current season only versus those vaccinated in neither season
Fig. 6Comparison of vaccine effectiveness (VE) estimates against influenza H3N2 in those vaccinated in the current season only versus those vaccinated in neither season
Fig. 7Comparison of vaccine effectiveness (VE) estimates against influenza B in those vaccinated in the current season only versus those vaccinated in neither season
Fig. 8Comparison of vaccine effectiveness (VE) estimates against influenza H1N1 in those vaccinated in both seasons versus those vaccinated in the current season only
Fig. 9Comparison of vaccine effectiveness (VE) estimates against influenza H3N2 in those vaccinated in both seasons versus those vaccinated in the current season only
Fig. 10Comparison of vaccine effectiveness (VE) estimates against influenza B in those vaccinated in both seasons versus those vaccinated in the current season only