| Literature DB >> 33298015 |
Myint Tin Tin Htar1, Sally Jackson2, Paul Balmer3, Lidia Cristina Serra3, Andrew Vyse4, Mary Slack5, Margarita Riera-Montes2, David L Swerdlow3, Jamie Findlow6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Monovalent meningococcal C conjugate vaccine (MCCV) was introduced into the routine immunization program in many countries in Europe and worldwide following the emergence of meningococcal serogroup C (MenC) in the late 1990s. This systematic literature review summarizes the immediate and long-term impact and effectiveness of the different MCCV vaccination schedules and strategies employed.Entities:
Keywords: Meningococcal disease; effectiveness; herd protection; immunization; impact
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33298015 PMCID: PMC7724720 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-020-09946-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Selection flowchart of included studies. Abbreviation: AUS: Australia; BE: Belgium; BR: Brazil; CAN: Canada; ESP: Spain; GER: Germany; ITA: Italy; NL: Netherlands; UK: United Kingdom
Fig. 2Impact of MCCV program in the UK (Incidence rate reduction comparing pre-and-post-vaccination periods). MCCV program introduced in the NIP in 1999 (at 2, 3, 4 months of age). Subsequest schedules changes were made in 2006 (at 3, 4 months), 2013 (at 2, 12 months; 13–14 years); 2015 (MCCV at 2, 12 months; MCV4 at 13–14 years); 2016 (infant MCCV doseat 2 months was removed)
Fig. 3a Impact of MCCV program in Spain, different age groups (Incidence rate reduction comparing pre-and-post-vaccination periods). Cano*: Cano 2004; Martinez#: Martinez 2009; Rojo¤: Rojo 2005. MCCV program introduced in the NIP in 2000 (2, 4, 6 months of age). Subsequent schedule changes were made in 2006 (at 2, 4–6, 12–24 months), 2014 (at 2, 4–6, 12–24 months, 12 years). b Impact of MCCV program in Spain, all ages (Incidence rate reduction comparing pre-and-post-vaccination periods). MCCV program introduced in the NIP in 2000 (at 2,4, 6 months of age). Subsequent schedule changes were made in 2006 (at 2, 4–6, 12–24 months), 2014 (at 2, 4–6, 12–24 months, 12 years)
Fig. 4Impact of MCCV program in Brazil (Incidence rate reduction comparing pre-and-post-vaccination periods). *Brazil except Salvador. MCCV program introduced in the NIP in 2010 (at 3, 5, 12–15 months of age)
Fig. 5Impact of MCCV program in other countries (Incidence rate reduction comparing pre-and-post-vaccination periods). Australia: MCCVintroduced in 2003 (at 12 months of age); Belgium: MCCV introduced in 2002 (at 12–15 months of age); Canada: MCCV introduced in 2001–2005 (at 2, 4, 6 months of age); Italy MCCV program introduced in the NIP in 2000 (2, 4, 6 months of age)
MCCV effectiveness within and over 1 year following vaccination of included studies
| Country, study period (References) | Schedule and at age at vaccination | Vaccine effectiveness (95% CI); time post-vaccination | |
|---|---|---|---|
| ≤1 year | > 1 year | ||
| UK, 2000–2004 (Trotter 2004) [ | Routine 3 doses (at 2, 3 and 4 months) | 93% (67 to 99) | −81% (−7430 to71) |
| UK, 2000–2009 (Campbell 2010) [ | Routine 3 doses (at 2, 3, and 4 months) | 97% (91 to 99) | 68% (− 63 to 90) |
| Spain 2001–2013 (Garrido-Estepa 2014) [ | Routine 3 doses (at 2,4 and 6 months) | 98% (95 to 99) | 81% (67 to 90) |
| Spain 2001–2013 (Garrido-Estepa 2014) [ | Routine 3 doses (at 2,5 and > 12 months) | 100% (98 to 100) | 89% (− 23 to 99) |
| Spain 2001–2013 (Garrido-Estepa 2014) [ | Routine 1–3 doses (at < 20 years) | 99% (98 to 99) | 91% (88 to 93) |
| UK, 2000–2004 (Trotter 2004) [ | Catch-up 2 doses (2 doses at 5-12 months) | 87% (11 to 99) | 82% (−8 to 97) |
| UK, 2000–2009 (Campbell 2010) [ | Catch-up 2 doses (2 doses at 5-12 months) | 91% (− 8 to 100) | 84% (31 to 97) |
| Spain 2001–2013 (Garrido-Estepa 2014) [ | Catch-up 2 doses (at 1–5 years) | 99% (94 to 100) | 91% (69 to 97) |
| UK, 2000–2004 (Trotter 2004) [ | Catch-up 1 dose (at 1–2 years) | 88% (65 to 96) | 61% (− 327 to 94) |
| UK, 2000–2004 (Trotter 2004) [ | Catch-up 1 dose (at 3–4 years) | 98% (90 to 100) | 93% (78 to 98) |
| UK, 2000–2004 (Trotter 2004) [ | Catch-up 1 dose (at 11–16 years) | 96% (89 to 99) | 90% (77 to 96) |
| UK, 2000–2009 (Campbell 2010) [ | Catch-up 1 dose (at 1–2 years) | 89% (64 to 98) | 71% (− 40 to 93) |
| UK, 2000–2009 (Campbell 2010) [ | Catch-up 1 dose (at 3–18 years) | 96% (92 to 99) | 93% (87 to 96) |
| Spain 1999–2004 (Larrauri 2005) [ | Catch-up 1 dose (at 7 months-5 years) | 100% (98 to 100) | 94% (71 to 99) |
| Spain 2001–2013 (Garrido-Estepa 2014) [ | Catch-up 1 dose (at 6–12 months) | 99% (95 to 100) | 93% (87 to 96) |
| Spain 2001–2013 (Garrido-Estepa 2014) [ | Catch-up 1 dose (at 6–20 years) | 100% (100 to 100) | 96% (91 to 98) |
Fig. 6Vaccine Effectiveness estimates of MCCV by doses received and by age at vaccination in the UK. Footnotes: 1–3 doses (3 doses at 2, 3, 4 months); 2 doses for 5–11 months old; 1 dose for ≥ year. Abbreviation: NR: Not reported
Fig. 7Vaccine Effectiveness estimates by doses received and by age at vaccination of MCCV in Spain