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Assessing direct and indirect effects of pediatric influenza vaccination in Germany by individual-based simulations

Children have a high burden of influenza and play a central role in spreading influenza. Routinely vaccinating children against influenza may, thus, not only reduce their disease burden, but also that of the general population, including the elderly who frequently suffer severe complications. Using...

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Autores principales: Schmidt-Ott, Ruprecht, Molnar, Daniel, Anastassopoulou, Anastassia, Yanni, Emad, Krumm, Claudia, Bekkat-Berkani, Rafik, Dos Santos, Gaël, Henneke, Philipp, Knuf, Markus, Schwehm, Markus, Eichner, Martin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Taylor & Francis 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7227695/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31647348
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21645515.2019.1682843
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author Schmidt-Ott, Ruprecht
Molnar, Daniel
Anastassopoulou, Anastassia
Yanni, Emad
Krumm, Claudia
Bekkat-Berkani, Rafik
Dos Santos, Gaël
Henneke, Philipp
Knuf, Markus
Schwehm, Markus
Eichner, Martin
author_facet Schmidt-Ott, Ruprecht
Molnar, Daniel
Anastassopoulou, Anastassia
Yanni, Emad
Krumm, Claudia
Bekkat-Berkani, Rafik
Dos Santos, Gaël
Henneke, Philipp
Knuf, Markus
Schwehm, Markus
Eichner, Martin
author_sort Schmidt-Ott, Ruprecht
collection PubMed
description Children have a high burden of influenza and play a central role in spreading influenza. Routinely vaccinating children against influenza may, thus, not only reduce their disease burden, but also that of the general population, including the elderly who frequently suffer severe complications. Using the published individual-based tool 4Flu, we simulated how pediatric vaccination would change infection incidence in Germany. Transmission of four influenza strains was simulated in 100,000 individuals with German demography and contact structure. After initialization with the recorded trivalent influenza vaccination coverage for 20 years (1997–2016), all vaccinations were switched to quadrivalent influenza vaccine (QIV). Scenarios where vaccination coverage of children (0.5-17-year-old) was increased from the current value (4.3%) to a maximum of 10-60% were compared to baseline with unchanged coverage, averaging results of 1,000 pairs of simulations over a 20-year evaluation period (2017–2036). Pediatric vaccination coverage of 10-60% annually prevented 218–1,732 (6.3–50.5%) infections in children, 204–1,961 (2.9–28.2%) in young adults and 95–868 (3.1–28.9%) in the elderly in a population of 100,000 inhabitants; overall, 34.1% of infections in the total population (3.7 million infections per year in Germany) can be prevented if 60% of all children are vaccinated annually. 4.4–4.6 vaccinations were needed to prevent one infection among children; 1.7–1.8 were needed to prevent one in the population. Enhanced pediatric vaccination prevents many infections in children and even more in young adults and the elderly.
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spelling pubmed-72276952020-05-20 Assessing direct and indirect effects of pediatric influenza vaccination in Germany by individual-based simulations Schmidt-Ott, Ruprecht Molnar, Daniel Anastassopoulou, Anastassia Yanni, Emad Krumm, Claudia Bekkat-Berkani, Rafik Dos Santos, Gaël Henneke, Philipp Knuf, Markus Schwehm, Markus Eichner, Martin Hum Vaccin Immunother Research Paper Children have a high burden of influenza and play a central role in spreading influenza. Routinely vaccinating children against influenza may, thus, not only reduce their disease burden, but also that of the general population, including the elderly who frequently suffer severe complications. Using the published individual-based tool 4Flu, we simulated how pediatric vaccination would change infection incidence in Germany. Transmission of four influenza strains was simulated in 100,000 individuals with German demography and contact structure. After initialization with the recorded trivalent influenza vaccination coverage for 20 years (1997–2016), all vaccinations were switched to quadrivalent influenza vaccine (QIV). Scenarios where vaccination coverage of children (0.5-17-year-old) was increased from the current value (4.3%) to a maximum of 10-60% were compared to baseline with unchanged coverage, averaging results of 1,000 pairs of simulations over a 20-year evaluation period (2017–2036). Pediatric vaccination coverage of 10-60% annually prevented 218–1,732 (6.3–50.5%) infections in children, 204–1,961 (2.9–28.2%) in young adults and 95–868 (3.1–28.9%) in the elderly in a population of 100,000 inhabitants; overall, 34.1% of infections in the total population (3.7 million infections per year in Germany) can be prevented if 60% of all children are vaccinated annually. 4.4–4.6 vaccinations were needed to prevent one infection among children; 1.7–1.8 were needed to prevent one in the population. Enhanced pediatric vaccination prevents many infections in children and even more in young adults and the elderly. Taylor & Francis 2019-12-06 /pmc/articles/PMC7227695/ /pubmed/31647348 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21645515.2019.1682843 Text en © 2019 GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals SA. Published with license by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Schmidt-Ott, Ruprecht
Molnar, Daniel
Anastassopoulou, Anastassia
Yanni, Emad
Krumm, Claudia
Bekkat-Berkani, Rafik
Dos Santos, Gaël
Henneke, Philipp
Knuf, Markus
Schwehm, Markus
Eichner, Martin
Assessing direct and indirect effects of pediatric influenza vaccination in Germany by individual-based simulations
title Assessing direct and indirect effects of pediatric influenza vaccination in Germany by individual-based simulations
title_full Assessing direct and indirect effects of pediatric influenza vaccination in Germany by individual-based simulations
title_fullStr Assessing direct and indirect effects of pediatric influenza vaccination in Germany by individual-based simulations
title_full_unstemmed Assessing direct and indirect effects of pediatric influenza vaccination in Germany by individual-based simulations
title_short Assessing direct and indirect effects of pediatric influenza vaccination in Germany by individual-based simulations
title_sort assessing direct and indirect effects of pediatric influenza vaccination in germany by individual-based simulations
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7227695/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31647348
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21645515.2019.1682843
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