School of Public Health and Community Medicine, UNSW Medicine, University of New South Wales, Botany Street, Randwick, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.
School of Public Health and Community Medicine, UNSW Medicine, University of New South Wales, Botany Street, Randwick, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia; National Centre for Immunisation Research and Surveillance, Westmead, NSW, Australia.
Vaccine. 2017 Dec 4;35(48 Pt B):6737-6742. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2017.09.090. Epub 2017 Oct 16.
Re-exposure to varicella infection is believed to delay the occurrence of herpes zoster (HZ), which has led to predictions of increased HZ following introduction of varicella vaccination programs. However, there is evidence of rising HZ rates before vaccination was introduced. Here, we explore a potential explanation for this effect through demographic change leading to reductions in varicella exposure and boosting in the context of Australia over the 20th century. To study this hypothesis, we integrated observed changes in Australian birth and age-specific death rates with a varicella transmission model. The model was then calibrated to age-specific pre-vaccination seroprevalence (1997-9) and hospitalization data (1993-2009). Model simulations predicted that declining birth rates led to a 50% reduction in varicella incidence over the 20th century. When combined with the impacts of an aging population, the simulations further suggested that HZ incidence should have increased by 50% over the 20th century. However, we found that after age-standardization, the residual increase in HZ due to reduced boosting was only about 8% over the 20th century. Results were also sensitive to the assumed duration of immunity to HZ and whether multiple HZ episodes were possible. Despite a strong predicted effect of demographic change on varicella incidence, our findings suggest that improved survival is the main contributor to any rise in HZ rates prior to vaccination in Australia. Removing survival effects through age-standardization is recommended when considering epidemiologic or model-based analysis of past trends in HZ.
据信,再次接触水痘感染会延迟带状疱疹(HZ)的发生,这导致人们预测在引入水痘疫苗接种计划后,HZ 病例会增加。然而,在接种疫苗之前,已经有证据表明 HZ 发病率上升。在这里,我们通过 20 世纪澳大利亚人口结构变化导致的水痘接触减少和免疫力增强来探索这种影响的潜在解释。为了研究这一假设,我们将澳大利亚的出生和年龄特异性死亡率变化与水痘传播模型相结合。然后,该模型根据年龄特异性的疫苗接种前血清阳性率(1997-9 年)和住院数据(1993-2009 年)进行校准。模型模拟预测,出生率下降导致 20 世纪水痘发病率下降了 50%。当结合人口老龄化的影响时,模拟进一步表明,20 世纪 HZ 发病率应该增加了 50%。然而,我们发现,经过年龄标准化后,由于增强作用减弱,HZ 的残余增长在 20 世纪仅增加了约 8%。结果还对 HZ 免疫持续时间和是否可能发生多次 HZ 发作的假设敏感。尽管人口结构变化对水痘发病率有很强的预测作用,但我们的研究结果表明,在澳大利亚接种疫苗之前,任何 HZ 发病率上升的主要原因是生存状况的改善。在考虑 HZ 过去趋势的流行病学或基于模型的分析时,建议通过年龄标准化消除生存效果。