Jayasundara Kavisha, Soobiah Charlene, Thommes Edward, Tricco Andrea C, Chit Ayman
GSK Inc, 7333 Mississauga Road North, Mississauga, ON, L5N 6L4, Canada.
Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute of St. Michael's Hospital, 30 Bond Street, Toronto, ON, M5B 1W8, Canada.
BMC Infect Dis. 2014 Dec 11;14:670. doi: 10.1186/s12879-014-0670-5.
The natural (i.e. unvaccinated population) attack rate of an infectious disease is an important parameter required for understanding disease transmission. As such, it is an input parameter in infectious disease mathematical models. Influenza is an infectious disease that poses a major health concern worldwide and the natural attack rate of this disease is crucial in determining the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of public health interventions and informing surveillance program design. We estimated age-stratified, strain-specific natural attack rates of laboratory-confirmed influenza in unvaccinated individuals.
Utilizing an existing systematic review, we calculated the attack rates in the trial placebo arms using a random effects model and a meta-regression analysis (GSK study identifier: 117102).
This post-hoc analysis included 34 RCTs (Randomized Control Trials) contributing to 47 influenza seasons from 1970 to 2009. Meta-regression analyses showed that age and type of influenza were important covariates. The attack rates (95% CI (Confidence Interval)) in adults for all influenza, type A and type B were 3.50% (2.30%, 4.60%), 2.32% (1.47%, 3.17%) and 0.59% (0.28%, 0.91%) respectively. For children, they were 15.20% (11.40%, 18.90%), 12.27% (8.56%, 15.97%) and 5.50% (3.49%, 7.51%) respectively.
This analysis demonstrated that unvaccinated children have considerably higher exposure risk than adults and influenza A can cause more disease than influenza B. Moreover, a higher ratio of influenza B:A in children than adults was observed. This study provides a new, stratified and up to-date natural attack rates that can be used in influenza infectious disease models and are consistent with previous published work in the field.
传染病的自然(即未接种疫苗人群)发病率是理解疾病传播所需的重要参数。因此,它是传染病数学模型中的一个输入参数。流感是一种在全球范围内引起重大健康关注的传染病,这种疾病的自然发病率对于确定公共卫生干预措施的有效性和成本效益以及为监测项目设计提供信息至关重要。我们估计了未接种疫苗个体中实验室确诊流感的年龄分层、毒株特异性自然发病率。
利用现有的系统评价,我们使用随机效应模型和元回归分析计算了试验安慰剂组的发病率(葛兰素史克研究标识符:117102)。
这项事后分析纳入了34项随机对照试验,涵盖了1970年至2009年的47个流感季节。元回归分析表明,年龄和流感类型是重要的协变量。所有流感、甲型流感和乙型流感在成人中的发病率(95%置信区间)分别为3.50%(2.30%,4.60%)、2.32%(1.47%,3.17%)和0.59%(0.28%,0.91%)。在儿童中,发病率分别为15.20%(11.40%,18.90%)、12.27%(8.56%,15.97%)和5.50%(3.49%,7.51%)。
该分析表明,未接种疫苗的儿童比成人有更高的暴露风险,甲型流感比乙型流感能导致更多疾病。此外,观察到儿童中乙型流感与甲型流感的比例高于成人。本研究提供了一种新的、分层的和最新的自然发病率,可用于流感传染病模型,并且与该领域先前发表的工作一致。