Connecticut Emerging Infections Program, Yale School of Public Health, New Haven, CT, USA.
California Emerging Infections Program, Oakland, CA, USA.
Influenza Other Respir Viruses. 2017 Sep;11(5):404-411. doi: 10.1111/irv.12465. Epub 2017 Aug 1.
Previous FluSurv-NET studies found that adult females had a higher incidence of influenza-associated hospitalizations than males. To identify groups of women at higher risk than men, we analyzed data from 14 FluSurv-NET sites that conducted population-based surveillance for laboratory-confirmed influenza-associated hospitalizations among residents of 78 US counties.
We analyzed 6292 laboratory-confirmed, geocodable (96%) adult cases collected by FluSurv-NET during the 2010-12 influenza seasons. We used 2010 US Census and 2008-2012 American Community Survey data to calculate overall age-adjusted and age group-specific female:male incidence rate ratios (IRR) by race/ethnicity and census tract-level poverty. We used national 2010 pregnancy rates to estimate denominators for pregnant women aged 18-49. We calculated male:female IRRs excluding them and IRRs for pregnant:non-pregnant women.
Overall, 55% of laboratory-confirmed influenza cases were female. Female:male IRRs were highest for females aged 18-49 of high neighborhood poverty (IRR 1.50, 95% CI 1.30-1.74) and of Hispanic ethnicity (IRR 1.70, 95% CI 1.34-2.17). These differences disappeared after excluding pregnant women. Overall, 26% of 1083 hospitalized females aged 18-49 were pregnant. Pregnant adult females were more likely to have influenza-associated hospitalizations than their non-pregnant counterparts (relative risk [RR] 5.86, 95% CI 5.12-6.71), but vaccination levels were similar (25.5% vs 27.8%).
Overall rates of influenza-associated hospitalization were not significantly different for men and women after excluding pregnant women. Among women aged 18-49, pregnancy increased the risk of influenza-associated hospitalization sixfold but did not increase the likelihood of vaccination. Improving vaccination rates in pregnant women should be an influenza vaccination priority.
先前的 FluSurv-NET 研究发现,成年女性因流感住院的比例高于男性。为了确定比男性风险更高的女性群体,我们分析了来自 14 个 FluSurv-NET 站点的数据,这些站点对美国 78 个县的居民进行了基于人群的流感相关住院情况的监测。
我们分析了 FluSurv-NET 在 2010-12 流感季节收集的 6292 例经实验室确诊、地理位置可确定(96%)的成年病例。我们使用 2010 年美国人口普查和 2008-2012 年美国社区调查数据,按种族/族裔和普查区贫困程度计算了所有年龄调整后的和年龄组特定的女性与男性发病率比值(IRR)。我们使用全国 2010 年的妊娠率来估计 18-49 岁孕妇的分母。我们排除了这些孕妇,计算了男性与女性的 IRR,以及孕妇与非孕妇的 IRR。
总体而言,实验室确诊的流感病例中有 55%为女性。年龄在 18-49 岁、居住在贫困社区的女性(IRR 1.50,95%置信区间 1.30-1.74)和西班牙裔女性(IRR 1.70,95%置信区间 1.34-2.17)的女性与男性的 IRR 最高。在排除孕妇后,这些差异消失了。总体而言,1083 名年龄在 18-49 岁的住院女性中,有 26%为孕妇。患有流感的成年女性比未怀孕的女性更有可能住院(相对风险 [RR] 5.86,95%置信区间 5.12-6.71),但疫苗接种率相似(25.5%比 27.8%)。
排除孕妇后,男性和女性因流感住院的总体比例没有显著差异。在 18-49 岁的女性中,怀孕使流感相关住院的风险增加了六倍,但并没有增加疫苗接种的可能性。提高孕妇的疫苗接种率应成为流感疫苗接种的重点。