Vaccinating children against influenza increases variability in epidemic size

Seasonal influenza causes a high disease burden. Many influenza vaccination programmes target the elderly and persons at high risk of complications. Some countries have recommended or even implemented a paediatric vaccination programme. Such a programme is expected to reduce influenza transmission i...

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Main Authors: J.A. Backer, M. van Boven, W. van der Hoek, J. Wallinga
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-03-01
Series:Epidemics
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1755436518300732
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spelling doaj-def3194cf1f64a54a608a300380d62a12020-11-25T01:51:14ZengElsevierEpidemics1755-43652019-03-012695103Vaccinating children against influenza increases variability in epidemic sizeJ.A. Backer0M. van Boven1W. van der Hoek2J. Wallinga3Centre for Infectious Disease Control, National Institute of Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), Bilthoven, The Netherlands; Corresponding author.Centre for Infectious Disease Control, National Institute of Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), Bilthoven, The NetherlandsCentre for Infectious Disease Control, National Institute of Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), Bilthoven, The NetherlandsCentre for Infectious Disease Control, National Institute of Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), Bilthoven, The Netherlands; Department of Medical Statistics and Bioinformatics, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, The NetherlandsSeasonal influenza causes a high disease burden. Many influenza vaccination programmes target the elderly and persons at high risk of complications. Some countries have recommended or even implemented a paediatric vaccination programme. Such a programme is expected to reduce influenza transmission in the population, offering direct protection to the vaccinated children and indirect protection to the elderly.We study the impact of a child vaccination programme with an age- and risk-structured transmission model, calibrated to data of 11 influenza seasons in the Netherlands. The model tracks the build-up of immunes and susceptibles in each age cohort over time, and it allows for seasonal variation in vaccine match and antigenic drift. Different vaccination strategies are evaluated for three target age groups (2–3, 2–12 and 2–16 year olds) over the full range of vaccination coverages (0–100%).The results show that the paediatric vaccination programme has only a limited impact on the elderly age groups, which account for most influenza morbidity and mortality. This is due to two notable changes in infection dynamics. First, an age shift is observed: influenza infections are reduced in vaccinated children, but are increased in young adults with limited natural immunity after years of vaccination. These young adults assume the role of driving the epidemic. Second, a year with low influenza activity can be followed by a large epidemic due to build-up of susceptibles. This variation of the infection attack rate increases with increasing vaccination coverage.The increased variability in the infection attack rate implies that health care facilities should be prepared for rare but larger peaks in influenza patients. Moreover, vaccinating the group with the highest transmission potential, results in a larger dependency on a secure vaccine supply. These arguments should be taken into account in the decision to introduce mass vaccination of school-aged children against influenza. Keywords: Influenza virus, Transmission model, Infection attack rate, Vaccination, Childrenhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1755436518300732
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J.A. Backer
M. van Boven
W. van der Hoek
J. Wallinga
spellingShingle J.A. Backer
M. van Boven
W. van der Hoek
J. Wallinga
Vaccinating children against influenza increases variability in epidemic size
Epidemics
author_facet J.A. Backer
M. van Boven
W. van der Hoek
J. Wallinga
author_sort J.A. Backer
title Vaccinating children against influenza increases variability in epidemic size
title_short Vaccinating children against influenza increases variability in epidemic size
title_full Vaccinating children against influenza increases variability in epidemic size
title_fullStr Vaccinating children against influenza increases variability in epidemic size
title_full_unstemmed Vaccinating children against influenza increases variability in epidemic size
title_sort vaccinating children against influenza increases variability in epidemic size
publisher Elsevier
series Epidemics
issn 1755-4365
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Seasonal influenza causes a high disease burden. Many influenza vaccination programmes target the elderly and persons at high risk of complications. Some countries have recommended or even implemented a paediatric vaccination programme. Such a programme is expected to reduce influenza transmission in the population, offering direct protection to the vaccinated children and indirect protection to the elderly.We study the impact of a child vaccination programme with an age- and risk-structured transmission model, calibrated to data of 11 influenza seasons in the Netherlands. The model tracks the build-up of immunes and susceptibles in each age cohort over time, and it allows for seasonal variation in vaccine match and antigenic drift. Different vaccination strategies are evaluated for three target age groups (2–3, 2–12 and 2–16 year olds) over the full range of vaccination coverages (0–100%).The results show that the paediatric vaccination programme has only a limited impact on the elderly age groups, which account for most influenza morbidity and mortality. This is due to two notable changes in infection dynamics. First, an age shift is observed: influenza infections are reduced in vaccinated children, but are increased in young adults with limited natural immunity after years of vaccination. These young adults assume the role of driving the epidemic. Second, a year with low influenza activity can be followed by a large epidemic due to build-up of susceptibles. This variation of the infection attack rate increases with increasing vaccination coverage.The increased variability in the infection attack rate implies that health care facilities should be prepared for rare but larger peaks in influenza patients. Moreover, vaccinating the group with the highest transmission potential, results in a larger dependency on a secure vaccine supply. These arguments should be taken into account in the decision to introduce mass vaccination of school-aged children against influenza. Keywords: Influenza virus, Transmission model, Infection attack rate, Vaccination, Children
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1755436518300732
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