| Literature DB >> 34592804 |
Byung Ok Kwak1, Young Jin Hong2, Dong Hyun Kim2.
Abstract
The Japanese encephalitis (JE) virus is the leading cause of vaccine-preventable encephalitis in Asia. Since the introduction of a universal JE vaccination program and urbanization of Korea, the incidence of JE has dramatically decreased in Korea. However, recent JE cases have occurred, predominantly among unvaccinated adults and with a shift in age distribution. Here we aimed to review the changes in age-specific JE seroprevalence over time and discuss the implications of JE vaccination programs in Korea. Following the last epidemic in 1982-1983, mandatory vaccination for all children aged 3-15 years was conducted annually until 1994. However, JE has reemerged, predominantly affecting unvaccinated adults aged 40 years or older and demonstrating a shift in age distribution toward older populations. The age-specific seroprevalence of the JE virus in Korea has changed noticeably over time. Seropositivity in children and adolescents increased from 10%-59% in the 1970s to 90%-92% in the 1980s after the implementation of the JE vaccination program and increased further to 98% in 2012. No age-specific difference in the seroprevalence of JE was found, and appropriate levels of immunity to JE were maintained for all age groups. Continuous surveillance of the seroprevalence of JE is essential to establish a proper immunization policy in Korea.Entities:
Keywords: Japanese encephalitis vaccine; Korea; Neutralizing antibodies; Seroprevalence
Year: 2021 PMID: 34592804 PMCID: PMC8898622 DOI: 10.3345/cep.2020.01984
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Exp Pediatr ISSN: 2713-4148
Fig. 1.Areas at risk for Japanese encephalitis (JE) virus transmission and JE vaccine introduction. Adapted from Heffelfinger et al. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2017;66:579-83 [3].
Fig. 2.Annual numbers of Japanese encephalitis cases, 1960–2020. JEV, Japanese encephalitis virus vaccine; NIP, national immunization program. Adapted from Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency. Infectious diseases surveillance yearbook 2019 [14]. Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency. Infectious disease portal [Internet]. Cheongju, Korea: Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency; 2020 [cited 2022 Jan 20]. Available from: https://www.kdca.go.kr/npt/biz/npp/ist/simple/simplePdStatsMain.do?icdCd=NC0003&icdgrpCd=03.
Fig. 3.Age distribution of cases of Japanese encephalitis in Korea, 2001–2019. Adapted from Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency. Infectious diseases surveillance yearbook 2019 [14].
Summary of Japanese encephalitis vaccines and changes in immunization schedule for children and adolescents in Korea
| Year | Age | Immunization schedule |
|---|---|---|
| 1967 | 3–15 years | JE-MB was first introduced in Korea |
| 1984 | 3–15 years | Mandatory annual vaccination was implemented for all children aged 3–15 years |
| 1995 | 3–15 years | Three-dose primary series at 3 years and boosters given every 2 years |
| 2000 | 12 months–12 years | Two-dose primary series at 12–24 months and 3 boosters at 12 months after the second dose, at ages 6 and 12 years |
| 2012 | 12 months–12 years | The first dose at age 12–23 months and the second dose at least 12 months later for a live-attenuated virus vaccine. |
| One booster dose at 6 years of age was terminated as of 2012 | ||
| 2014 | 12 months–12 years | A live-attenuated vaccine was included in NIP |
| 2015 | 12 months–12 years | JE-VC was included in NIP |
JE-MB, inactivated Japanese encephalitis vaccine; JE-VC, inactivated Vero cell-derived JE vaccine; NIP, national immunization program.
Adapted from Kwak et al. Vaccines (Basel) 2020;8:328. [30]
Japanese encephalitis vaccines licensed for use in Korea
| Type of vaccine | Manufacturer | Trade name | Virus strain | Substrate | Immunization schedule |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| JE-MB[ | Greencross | Greencross Japanese encephalitis vaccine | Nakayama | Mouse brain | Days 0, 7–30 at 12–23 months of age; booster after 1 year, then 6, 12 years of age |
| Boryung Biopharma | Boryung Japanese encephalitis vaccine | ||||
| Boryung Japanese encephalitis vaccine PFS | |||||
| JE-VC | Boryung Biopharma | Boryung cell-culture Japanese encephalitis vaccine | Beijing-1 | Vero cells | |
| Greencross cell-culture Japanese encephalitis vaccine | |||||
| LJEV | Glovax | CD.JEVAX | SA-14-14-2 | PHK cells | 1st dose at 12–23 months of age; 2nd dose 12 months after 1st dose |
| JE-CV | Sanofi Pasteur | IMOJEV | SA14-14-2/yellow fever 17D | Vero cells |
JE-CV, recombinant chimeric virus vaccine; JE-MB, inactivated Japanese encephalitis vaccine; JE-VC, inactivated Vero cell-derived Japanese encephalitis vaccine; LJEV, live-attenuated Japanese encephalitis vaccine; PHK, primary hamster kidney.
JE-MB is not currently in use and has been replaced by JE-VC.
Adapted from the Korean Pediatric Society. Japanese encephalitis vaccines. In: Kim JH, editor. Immunization guideline. 9th ed. [16]
Status of Japanese encephalitis vaccination schedules for children and adolescents in high-risk countries
| Country | Type of vaccine | Schedules | Entire country | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cambodia | LJEV | 9 Months | Yes | |
| China | IJEV | 8 Months, +7–10 days, 2, 6 years | No | |
| LJEV | 8 Months, 2 years | Yes | ||
| India | IJEV | 9–12, 16–24 Months | No | |
| LJEV | 9–12, 16–24 Months | No | ||
| Indonesia | LJEV | 10 Months | No | Only 9 districts at Bali Province |
| Japan | IJEV | 36, 37 Months, 4, 9 years | Yes | |
| Laos | LJEV | 9 Months | Yes | |
| Malaysia | LJEV | 9, 21 Months | No | Sarawak state only |
| Myanmar | LJEV | 9 Months | Yes | |
| Nepal | LJEV | 12 Months | Yes | |
| Republic of Korea | IJEV | 12–23 Months, +7-30 days, +12 months, 6, 12 years | Yes | |
| LJEV | 12–23 Months, +12 months | Yes | ||
| Sri Lanka | LJEV | 1 Year | Yes | |
| Taiwan | IJEV | 15, 27 Months | Yes | |
| Thailand | LJEV | 1, 2.5 Years | Yes | |
| Viet Nam | IJEV | 12 Months, +2 weeks, 2 years | Yes |
IJEV, inactivated Japanese encephalitis vaccine; LJEV, live-attenuated Japanese encephalitis vaccine.
Adapted from WHO vaccine-preventable diseases: a monitoring system. 2020 global summary, Last updated 15 July 2020 (data as of 12 October 2020) [Internet]. Geneva (Switzerland): World Health Organization; 2020 [cited 2022 Jan 20]. Available from: https://apps.who.int/immunization_monitoring/globalsummary/countries?countrycriteria%5Bcountry%5D%5B%5D=KOR.