Ortiz Justin R, Neuzil Kathleen M, Cooke Colin R, Neradilek Moni B, Goss Christopher H, Shay David K
Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, United States of America; Department of Global Health, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, United States of America; Vaccine Access and Delivery Global Program, PATH, Seattle, Washington, United States of America.
Department of Medicine, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Nov 25;9(11):e113903. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0113903. eCollection 2014.
Studies seeking to estimate the burden of influenza among hospitalized adults often use case definitions that require presence of pneumonia. The goal of this study was to assess the extent to which restricting influenza testing to adults hospitalized with pneumonia could underestimate the total burden of hospitalized influenza disease.
We conducted a modelling study using the complete State Inpatient Databases from Arizona, California, and Washington and regional influenza surveillance data acquired from CDC from January 2003 through March 2009. The exposures of interest were positive laboratory tests for influenza A (H1N1), influenza A (H3N2), and influenza B from two contiguous US Federal Regions encompassing the study area. We identified the two outcomes of interest by ICD-9-CM code: respiratory and circulatory hospitalizations, as well as critical illness hospitalizations (acute respiratory failure, severe sepsis, and in-hospital death). We linked the hospitalization datasets with the virus surveillance datasets by geographic region and month of hospitalization. We used negative binomial regression models to estimate the number of influenza-associated events for the outcomes of interest. We sub-categorized these events to include all outcomes with or without pneumonia diagnosis codes.
We estimated that there were 80,834 (95% CI 29,214-174,033) influenza-associated respiratory and circulatory hospitalizations and 26,760 (95% CI 14,541-47,464) influenza-associated critical illness hospitalizations. When a pneumonia diagnosis was excluded, the estimated number of influenza-associated respiratory and circulatory hospitalizations was 24,816 (95% CI 6,342-92,624). The estimated number of influenza-associated critical illness hospitalizations was 8,213 (95% CI 3,764-20,799). Around 30% of both influenza-associated respiratory and circulatory hospitalizations, as well as influenza-associated critical illness hospitalizations did not have pneumonia diagnosis codes.
Surveillance studies which only consider hospitalizations that include a diagnosis of pneumonia may underestimate the total burden of influenza hospitalizations.
旨在估算住院成人流感负担的研究通常使用需要存在肺炎的病例定义。本研究的目的是评估将流感检测仅限于因肺炎住院的成人会在多大程度上低估住院流感疾病的总负担。
我们使用来自亚利桑那州、加利福尼亚州和华盛顿州的完整州住院数据库以及2003年1月至2009年3月从美国疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)获取的区域流感监测数据进行了一项建模研究。感兴趣的暴露因素是来自涵盖研究区域的两个相邻美国联邦地区的甲型(H1N1)流感、甲型(H3N2)流感和乙型流感的实验室检测阳性结果。我们通过国际疾病分类第九版临床修正本(ICD-9-CM)编码确定了两个感兴趣的结局:呼吸和循环系统住院以及危重症住院(急性呼吸衰竭、严重脓毒症和院内死亡)。我们按地理区域和住院月份将住院数据集与病毒监测数据集进行了关联。我们使用负二项回归模型来估计感兴趣结局的流感相关事件数量。我们将这些事件进行了细分,以包括有或无肺炎诊断编码的所有结局。
我们估计有80,834例(95%可信区间29,214 - 174,033)流感相关的呼吸和循环系统住院以及26,760例(95%可信区间14,541 - 47,464)流感相关的危重症住院。当排除肺炎诊断时,估计的流感相关呼吸和循环系统住院数量为24,816例(95%可信区间6,342 - 92,624)。估计的流感相关危重症住院数量为8,213例(95%可信区间3,764 - 20,799)。大约30%的流感相关呼吸和循环系统住院以及流感相关危重症住院没有肺炎诊断编码。
仅考虑包含肺炎诊断的住院情况的监测研究可能会低估流感住院的总负担。