| Literature DB >> 29375036 |
Daniel Hungerford1,2,3,4, Roberto Vivancos5,6,7, Jonathan M Read6,7,8, Miren Iturriza-Gόmara9,6, Neil French9, Nigel A Cunliffe9,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rotavirus causes severe gastroenteritis in infants and young children worldwide. The UK introduced the monovalent rotavirus vaccine (Rotarix®) in July 2013. Vaccination is free of charge to parents, with two doses delivered at 8 and 12 weeks of age. We evaluated vaccine impact across a health system in relation to socioeconomic deprivation.Entities:
Keywords: Diarrhoea; Epidemiology; Gastroenteritis; Health equity; Health service; Paediatric; Rotavirus; Socioeconomic inequalities; Surveillance; Vaccine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29375036 PMCID: PMC5787923 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-017-0989-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Details of each outcome measure and data source
| Data source | Population | Outcome | Denominator/offset | Age in months (m) or years (y) | Time period |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alder Hey Children's NHS Foundation Trust | RVGE hospitalisations. Alder Hey's footprint covers the majority of Merseyside children | Laboratory-confirmed rotavirus gastroenteritis. Rotavirus antigen detected by immunochromatography test (2005–2009) or by enzyme immunoassay (2002–2005 and 2009 onwards) in a faecal specimen of a child with acute gastroenteritis | Total hospitalisations per month by age group | 0–14 y: < 12 m; 12–23 m; 24–59 m; 5–14 y | July 2002 to June 2016 |
| Hospital Episode Statistics – admitted patient care | Merseyside residents attending any hospital in England | Hospitalisation for all-cause acute gastroenteritis. Identified by ICD-10 codes: A00–A09) or as non-infectious gastroenteritis (K52.9), in any diagnosis field | Yearly estimated age-specific population of Merseyside. Source: Office for National Statistics; accessed through Public Health England [ | All ages: < 12 m; 12–23 m; 24–59 m; 5–14 y; 15–64 y; 65+ | July 2000 to June 2016 |
| Hospital Episode Statistics – accident and emergency | Merseyside residents attending three major emergency departments in Merseyside | Emergency department attendance for gastrointestinal conditions (AE diagnosis code 26); excluding subsequent admissions. Missing diagnosis data was imputed for one emergency department between November 2010 and March 2011 | Total emergency department attendances (excluding subsequent admissions) per month by age group | All ages: < 12 m; 12–23 m; 24–59 m; 5–14 y; 15–64 y; 65+ | July 2008 to June 2016 |
| Walk-in centre attendance records | Attendances at walk-in centres in Wirral, covering an estimated resident population of 320,000 | Walk-in centre attendance for infectious gastroenteritis. Read Codes: gastroenteritis – presumed infectious origin (A0812), diarrhoea of presumed infectious origin (A083); infantile viral gastroenteritis (A07y1); infectious gastroenteritis (A0803); enteritis due to rotavirus (A0762); and infectious diarrhoea (A082) | All walk-in centre attendances per month by age group | All ages: < 12 m; 12–23 m; 24–59 m; 5–14 y; 15–64 y; 65+ | July 2011 to June 2016 |
| GP records | Consultations at 136 GP practices in Merseyside, covering an estimated population of 790,000 | Consultations for infectious gastroenteritis (Read Codes as above for walk-in centre) | Yearly estimated GP registered population by age group. Data were available from 2010 to 2016, therefore estimates for 2007/2008 and 2008/2009 were synthetically estimated using predictions from linear regression models. Source: Public Health England and participating GP practices | All ages: < 12 m; 12–23 m; 24–59 m; 5–14 y; 15–64 y; 65+ | July 2007 to June 2016 |
GP general practice, RVGE rotavirus gastroenteritis, AE accident and emergency
Fig. 1Rotavirus vaccine uptake in 4/5 areas of Merseyside, UK, for children born between May 2013 and December 2015 by deprivation quintile
Fig. 2Trends in five study outcome measures for children aged 0–14 years in Merseyside, UK, July 2008 to June 2016. Each analysis examines trends, including a comparison of observed incidence (blue line) after rotavirus vaccination (July 2013 to June 2016) in the UK with expected incidence (red line) and associated 95% confidence intervals (red shaded area) in the absence of vaccination. Expected incidence and 95% confidence intervals are based on predictions from regression models fitted to available historic data for each outcome measure. The black hashed line represents the introduction of rotavirus vaccine in the UK in July 2013. CI confidence interval, ED emergency department, GP general practice, WIC walk-in centre
Changes in rates of hospitalisation and attendances at different levels of the health system post-rotavirus vaccine introduction in Merseyside, UK
| Age group | Mean yearly rate of hospitalisations and attendances (per 10,000)a | Percentage reduction in hospitalisation and attendance rates (95% CI)c | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-vaccination | Post-vaccination | |||||
| Observed | Observed | Expectedb | Full year | January–May | June–December | |
| Hospitalisations for laboratory-confirmed rotavirus to Alder Hey | ||||||
| < 12 m | 129 | 14 | 122 | 87 (78 to 93) | 94 (86 to 97) | 57 (10 to 81) |
| 12–23 m | 123 | 16 | 106 | 84 (73 to 91) | 87 (76 to 94) | 70 (19 to 91) |
| 24–59 m | 33 | 10 | 29 | 66 (44 to 81) | 74 (52 to 87) | 35 (to 70 to 77) |
| 5–14 y | 7 | 0.3 | 9 | 95 (84 to 99) | 96 (80 to 99.7) | 94 (71 to 99.7) |
| Total 0–59 m | 87 | 12 | 81 | 80 (70 to 87) | 88 (80 to 94) | 58 (25 to 77) |
| Hospitalisations for all-cause acute gastroenteritis | ||||||
| < 12 m | 402 | 230 | 468 | 46 (36 to 54) | 60 (49 to 69) | 35 (20 to 46) |
| 12–23 m | 271 | 128 | 311 | 50 (40 to 59) | 66 (56 to 74) | 37 (19 to 50) |
| 24–59 m | 72 | 54 | 78 | 26 (11 to 39) | 33 (10 to 50) | 22 (1 to 38) |
| 5–14 y | 18 | 20 | 28 | 32 (21 to 41) | 35 (19 to 48) | 29 (13 to 42) |
| 15–64 y | 39 | 60 | 66 | 8 (2 to 14) | 11 (1 to 19) | 6 (1 to 13) |
| 65+ | 135 | 157 | 210 | 25 (19 to 30) | 28 (19 to 36) | 22 (15 to 29) |
| Total 0–59 m | 178 | 104 | 213 | 44 (35 to 53) | 58 (46 to 67) | 35 (22 to 46) |
| ED attendances for gastrointestinal conditions (no admission) | ||||||
| < 12 m | 2034 | 1855 | 2816 | 22 (11 to 33) | 30 (15 to 42) | 16 (2 to 29) |
| 12–23 m | 1146 | 892 | 1650 | 31 (15 to 43) | 41 (19 to 57) | 23 (4 to 38) |
| 24–59 m | 759 | 759 | 1054 | 12 (-4 to 25) | 14 (-15 to 36) | 10 (-6 to 24) |
| 5–14 y | 552 | 661 | 1038 | 22 (11 to 31) | 17 (-2 to 33) | 25 (12 to 36) |
| 15–64 y | 405 | 503 | 993 | 29 (16 to 40) | 30 (4 to 49) | 28 (14 to 40) |
| 65+ | 341 | 438 | 788 | 21 (4 to 34) | 25 (-5 to 46) | 18 (-3 to 34) |
| Total 0–59 m | 1235 | 1124 | 1795 | 23 (11 to 33) | 31 (12 to 45) | 18 (4 to 29) |
| Walk-in centre attendances for infectious gastroenteritis | ||||||
| < 12 m | 574 | 373 | 644 | 37 (6 to 58) | 51 (12 to 73) | 25 (-26 to 55) |
| 12–23 m | 463 | 256 | 606 | 39 (0 to 63) | 67 (38 to 83) | 5 (-86 to 52) |
| 24–59 m | 196 | 153 | 167 | 18 (-20 to 44) | 36 (-12 to 64) | -5 (-79 to 38) |
| 5–14 y | 79 | 71 | 68 | 0 (-52 to 34) | 6 (-77 to 49) | -6 (-86 to 39) |
| 15–64 y | 55 | 51 | 61 | 24 (7 to 38) | 29 (0 to 49) | 21 (-4 to 40) |
| 65+ | 22 | 18 | 52 | 47 (-15 to 75) | 56 (-43 to 86) | 38 (-72 to 78) |
| Total 0–59 m | 362 | 231 | 363 | 32 (7 to 50) | 51 (22 to 69) | 12 (-27 to 39) |
| GP consultations for infectious gastroenteritis | ||||||
| < 12 m | 674 | 492 | 628 | 19 (4 to 33) | 40 (27 to 51) | 3 (-20 to 21) |
| 12–23 m | 590 | 418 | 498 | 13 (-10 to 31) | 38 (11 to 56) | -11 (-44 to 14) |
| 24–59 m | 184 | 166 | 172 | 8 (-14 to 26) | 7 (-29 to 33) | 9 (-20 to 31) |
| 5–14 y | 53 | 56 | 51 | -3 (-21 to 12) | -7 (-38 to 17) | 0 (-23 to 19) |
| 15–64 y | 41 | 30 | 41 | 26 (18 to 33) | 29 (17 to 40) | 23 (13 to 32) |
| 65+ | 35 | 29 | 48 | 36 (25 to 45) | 43 (30 to 54) | 30 (13 to 43) |
| Total 0–59 m | 363 | 282 | 331 | 13 (-3 to 26) | 29 (8 to 45) | 0 (-20 to 17) |
CI confidence interval, ED emergency department, GP general practice
aTable 1 provides specific denominators for each outcome measure
bExpected in the absence of vaccination using a negative binomial or Poisson model adjusting for month and rotavirus year for the pre-vaccine years
cPercentage change is calculated as 1-IRR. Incidence rate ratio (IRR) was calculated using a negative binomial model or Poisson model adjusting for month and rotavirus year
Fig. 3Trends in four study outcome measures for older children and adults aged 15+ years in Merseyside, UK, July 2008 to June 2016. Each analysis examines trends, including comparison of observed incidence (blue line) after rotavirus vaccination (July 2013 to June 2016) in the UK with expected incidence (red line) and associated 95% confidence intervals (red shaded area) in the absence of vaccination. Expected incidence and 95% confidence intervals are based on predictions from regression models fitted to available historic data for each outcome measure. The black hashed line represents the introduction of rotavirus vaccine in the UK in July 2013. CI confidence interval, ED emergency department, GP general practice, WIC walk-in centre
Fig. 4Relative risk of hospitalisation with acute all-cause-gastroenteritis prior to vaccine introduction, by age group and deprivation quintile, July 2004 to June 2013, Merseyside, UK. ref reference
Fig. 5Estimated all-cause acute gastroenteritis hospitalisations averted per 1,000 vaccine first doses delivered in the 2014/15 and 2015/16 seasons for vaccine-eligible cohorts aged < 12 months and 12–23 months. AGE acute gastroenteritis
Predicted all-cause acute gastroenteritis hospitalisations averted nationally in children under 2 years of age in 2015/16 at 95% vaccine uptake
| Age group | Index of Multiple Deprivation quintile | Estimated national population (2016) [ | Hospitalisations averted at 95% vaccine uptake | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number | 95% Lower CI | 95% Upper CI | |||
| < 12 months | 1 (most deprived) | 174,784 | 4395 | 3898 | 4925 |
| 2 | 149,462 | 2185 | 1795 | 2603 | |
| 3 | 126,372 | 1597 | 1292 | 1924 | |
| 4/5 (least deprived) | 212,359 | 2634 | 2156 | 3147 | |
| Total | 662,977 | 10,811 | |||
| 12–23 months | 1 (most deprived) | 176,129 | 2941 | 2579 | 3330 |
| 2 | 149,862 | 2397 | 2080 | 2740 | |
| 3 | 126,517 | 1363 | 1124 | 1621 | |
| 4/5 (least deprived) | 218,485 | 2771 | 2359 | 3218 | |
| Total | 670,993 | 9472 | |||
CI confidence interval