Shioda Kayoko, Toscano Cristiana M, Valenzuela Maria Tereza, Huarcaya William Valdez, Warren Joshua L, Weinberger Daniel M, de Oliveira Lucia H
Department of Epidemiology of Microbial Diseases, Yale School of Public Health, New Haven, CT, USA.
Department of Collective Health, Institute of Tropical Pathology and Public Health (IPTSP), Federal University of Goiás (UFG), Goiânia, Goiás, Brazil.
Gates Open Res. 2020 Sep 22;4:136. doi: 10.12688/gatesopenres.13187.1. eCollection 2020.
Pneumococcal conjugate vaccines (PCVs) have prevented deaths due to pneumonia among children. The effect may differ between higher- and lower-income populations due to various factors, such as differences in the distribution of pneumococcal serotypes, healthcare access, and PCV uptake. This study aims to evaluate an association between increasing PCV coverage and population-level declines in death due to pneumonia and its variation by socioeconomic status of subnational regions. We analyzed municipality-level mortality data from 2005 and 2015 for children aged 2-23 months in Brazil, Colombia, and Peru. We fit Poisson regression models to estimate the relationship between changes in PCV uptake and deaths due to all-cause pneumonia among subnational regions with different income levels. We controlled for changes unrelated to PCV by using data on non-respiratory deaths over time. Uptake of the third dose of PCV varied across subnational regions and was higher in high-income regions. Higher uptake of PCV was associated with larger declines in pneumonia mortality. This association did not differ by income level of the region in Brazil and Colombia. In Peru, low-income regions observed larger declines in pneumonia deaths, but there was large uncertainty in the difference between the low- and high-income regions. We estimated that, with 90% coverage, there would be 4-38% declines in all-cause pneumonia mortality across income levels and countries. Regions with higher PCV coverage experienced larger declines in pneumonia deaths, regardless of the income level. Having more reliable data on mortality records and vaccine uptake would improve the reliability of vaccine impact estimates.
肺炎球菌结合疫苗(PCV)已预防了儿童因肺炎导致的死亡。由于多种因素,如肺炎球菌血清型分布、医疗服务可及性和PCV接种率的差异,高收入和低收入人群中的效果可能有所不同。本研究旨在评估PCV覆盖率的提高与肺炎导致的死亡在人群层面的下降之间的关联,以及按次国家级区域社会经济地位的变化情况。我们分析了巴西、哥伦比亚和秘鲁2005年至2015年2至23个月儿童的市级死亡率数据。我们拟合泊松回归模型,以估计不同收入水平的次国家级区域中PCV接种率变化与全因肺炎死亡之间的关系。我们通过使用随时间推移的非呼吸道死亡数据来控制与PCV无关的变化。PCV第三剂的接种率在次国家级区域各不相同,在高收入区域更高。PCV接种率越高,肺炎死亡率下降幅度越大。在巴西和哥伦比亚,这种关联不因区域收入水平而异。在秘鲁,低收入区域肺炎死亡下降幅度更大,但低收入和高收入区域之间的差异存在很大不确定性。我们估计,覆盖率达到90%时,所有收入水平和国家的全因肺炎死亡率将下降4%至38%。无论收入水平如何,PCV覆盖率较高的区域肺炎死亡下降幅度更大。拥有更可靠的死亡率记录和疫苗接种数据将提高疫苗影响估计的可靠性。