Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

End of season influenza vaccine effectiveness in adults and children in the United Kingdom in 2017/18

2019; European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control; Volume: 24; Issue: 31 Linguagem: Inglês

10.2807/1560-7917.es.2019.24.31.1800488

ISSN

1560-7917

Autores

Richard Pebody, Abdelmajid Djennad, Joanna Ellis, Nick Andrews, Diogo Marques, Simon Cottrell, Arlene Reynolds, Rory Gunson, Mónica Galiano, Katja Höschler, Angie Lackenby, Chris Robertson, Mark G. O’Doherty, Mary Sinnathamby, Nikolaos Panagiotopoulos, Ivelina Yonova, Rebecca Webb, Catherine Moore, Matthew Donati, Muhammad Sartaj, Samantha J. Shepherd, Jim McMenamin, Simon de Lusignan, Maria Zambon,

Tópico(s)

Viral Infections and Outbreaks Research

Resumo

Background In the United Kingdom (UK), in recent influenza seasons, children are offered a quadrivalent live attenuated influenza vaccine (LAIV4), and eligible adults mainly trivalent inactivated vaccine (TIV). Aim To estimate the UK end-of-season 2017/18 adjusted vaccine effectiveness (aVE) and the seroprevalence in England of antibodies against influenza viruses cultured in eggs or tissue. Methods This observational study employed the test-negative case–control approach to estimate aVE in primary care. The population-based seroprevalence survey used residual age-stratified samples. Results Influenza viruses A(H3N2) (particularly subgroup 3C.2a2) and B (mainly B/Yamagata/16/88-lineage, similar to the quadrivalent vaccine B-virus component but mismatched to TIV) dominated. All-age aVE was 15% (95% confidence interval (CI): −6.3 to 32) against all influenza; −16.4% (95% CI: −59.3 to 14.9) against A(H3N2); 24.7% (95% CI: 1.1 to 42.7) against B and 66.3% (95% CI: 33.4 to 82.9) against A(H1N1)pdm09. For 2–17 year olds, LAIV4 aVE was 26.9% (95% CI: −32.6 to 59.7) against all influenza; −75.5% (95% CI: −289.6 to 21) against A(H3N2); 60.8% (95% CI: 8.2 to 83.3) against B and 90.3% (95% CI: 16.4 to 98.9) against A(H1N1)pdm09. For ≥ 18 year olds, TIV aVE against influenza B was 1.9% (95% CI: −63.6 to 41.2). The 2017 seroprevalence of antibody recognising tissue-grown A(H3N2) virus was significantly lower than that recognising egg-grown virus in all groups except 15–24 year olds. Conclusions Overall aVE was low driven by no effectiveness against A(H3N2) possibly related to vaccine virus egg-adaption and a new A(H3N2) subgroup emergence. The TIV was not effective against influenza B. LAIV4 against influenza B and A(H1N1)pdm09 was effective.

Referência(s)