The impact of new universal child influenza programs in Australia: Vaccine coverage, effectiveness and disease epidemiology in hospitalised children in 2018
Date
2020
Authors
Blyth, Christopher C
Cheng, Allen
Crawford, Nigel
Clark, Julia
Buttery, Jim
Marshall, Helen
Francis, Josh
McRae, Jocelynne
Kotsimbos, Tom
Kelly, Paul
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
Background: New jurisdictionally-based vaccination programs were established providing free quadrivalent influenza vaccine (QIV) for preschool Australian children in 2018. This was in addition to the
National Immunisation Program (NIP) funded QIV for Indigenous children and children with comorbid
medical conditions. We assessed the impact of this policy change on influenza disease burden and vaccine coverage, as well as report on 2018 vaccine effectiveness in a hospital-based surveillance system.
Methods: Subjects were recruited prospectively from twelve PAEDS-FluCAN sentinel hospital sites (April
until October 2018). Children aged 16 years hospitalised with an acute respiratory illness (ARI) and
laboratory-confirmed influenza were considered cases. Hospitalised children with ARI who tested negative for influenza were considered controls. VE estimates were calculated from the adjusted odds ratio of
vaccination in cases and controls.
Results: A total of 458 children were hospitalised with influenza: 31.7% were <2 years, 5.0% were
Indigenous, and 40.6% had medical comorbidities predisposing to severe influenza. Influenza A was
detected in 90.6% of children (A/H1N1: 38.0%; A/H3N2: 3.1%; A/unsubtyped 48.6%). The median length
of stay was 2 days (IQR: 1,3) and 8.1% were admitted to ICU. Oseltamivir use was infrequent (16.6%).
Two in-hospital deaths occurred (0.45%). 12.0% of influenza cases were vaccinated compared with
36.0% of test-negative controls. Vaccine effectiveness of QIV for preventing influenza hospitalisation
was estimated at 78.8% (95%CI: 66.9; 86.4). Conclusions: Compared with 2017 (n = 1268 cases), a significant reduction in severe influenza was
observed in Australian children, possibly contributed to by improved vaccine coverage and high vaccine
effectiveness. Despite introduction of jurisdictionally-funded preschool programs and NIP-funded vaccine for children with risk factors for severe disease, improved coverage is required to ensure adequate
protection against paediatric influenza morbidity and mortality.
Description
Keywords
Influenza, Hospitalization, Vaccination, Children, Vaccine effectiveness
Citation
Collections
Source
Vaccine
Type
Journal article
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2099-12-31
Downloads
File
Description