Respiratory Diseases Department, Centre for Infectious Disease Surveillance and Control, Public Health England, London, United Kingdom.
Statistics Department, Centre for Infectious Disease Surveillance and Control, Public Health England, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2013 Dec 11;8(12):e79360. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0079360. eCollection 2013.
Very different influenza seasons have been observed from 2008/09-2011/12 in England and Wales, with the reported burden varying overall and by age group. The objective of this study was to estimate the impact of influenza on all-cause and cause-specific mortality during this period. Age-specific generalised linear regression models fitted with an identity link were developed, modelling weekly influenza activity through multiplying clinical influenza-like illness consultation rates with proportion of samples positive for influenza A or B. To adjust for confounding factors, a similar activity indicator was calculated for Respiratory Syncytial Virus. Extreme temperature and seasonal trend were controlled for. Following a severe influenza season in 2008/09 in 65+yr olds (estimated excess of 13,058 influenza A all-cause deaths), attributed all-cause mortality was not significant during the 2009 pandemic in this age group and comparatively low levels of influenza A mortality were seen in post-pandemic seasons. The age shift of the burden of seasonal influenza from the elderly to young adults during the pandemic continued into 2010/11; a comparatively larger impact was seen with the same circulating A(H1N1)pdm09 strain, with the burden of influenza A all-cause excess mortality in 15-64 yr olds the largest reported during 2008/09-2011/12 (436 deaths in 15-44 yr olds and 1,274 in 45-64 yr olds). On average, 76% of seasonal influenza A all-age attributable deaths had a cardiovascular or respiratory cause recorded (average of 5,849 influenza A deaths per season), with nearly a quarter reported for other causes (average of 1,770 influenza A deaths per season), highlighting the importance of all-cause as well as cause-specific estimates. No significant influenza B attributable mortality was detected by season, cause or age group. This analysis forms part of the preparatory work to establish a routine mortality monitoring system ahead of introduction of the UK universal childhood seasonal influenza vaccination programme in 2013/14.
英格兰和威尔士在 2008/09 年至 2011/12 年期间经历了非常不同的流感季节,报告的负担总体上和按年龄组有所不同。本研究的目的是估计在此期间流感对全因和病因特异性死亡率的影响。通过将临床流感样疾病就诊率乘以流感 A 或 B 阳性样本比例,建立了带有恒等链接的特定年龄广义线性回归模型,对每周的流感活动进行建模。为了调整混杂因素,还为呼吸道合胞病毒计算了类似的活动指标。极端温度和季节性趋势都得到了控制。在 2008/09 年 65 岁以上人群中出现严重流感季节(估计流感 A 全因死亡人数超过 13058 人)后,该年龄组在 2009 年大流行期间归因于流感的死亡率并不显著,而且在大流行后季节中观察到的流感 A 死亡率较低。季节性流感负担从老年人向年轻人转移的年龄分布在大流行期间持续到 2010/11 年;在同一循环 A(H1N1)pdm09 株中,影响较大,15-64 岁人群的流感 A 全因超额死亡率是 2008/09-2011/12 年报告的最大(15-44 岁人群中死亡 436 人,45-64 岁人群中死亡 1274 人)。平均而言,76%的季节性流感 A 全年龄段归因死亡有心血管或呼吸道病因记录(每个季节平均有 5849 例流感 A 死亡),近四分之一报告为其他病因(每个季节平均有 1770 例流感 A 死亡),这突显了全因和病因特异性估计的重要性。各季节、病因或年龄组均未检测到明显的流感 B 归因死亡率。本分析是在 2013/14 年英国普遍开展儿童季节性流感疫苗接种计划之前,建立常规死亡率监测系统的准备工作的一部分。