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Late‐Season Influenza Vaccine Effectiveness Against Medically Attended Outpatient Illness, United States, December 2022–April 2023

Jessie R. Chung, Philip Shirk, Manjusha Gaglani, Manohar B. Mutnal, Mary Patricia Nowalk, Krissy Moehling Geffel, Stacey L. House, Tara Curley, Karen J. Wernli, Erika Kiniry, Emily T. Martin, Ivana A. Vaughn, Vel Murugan, Efrem S. Lim, Elie Saade, Kiran A. Faryar, Olivia L. Williams, Emmanuel B. Walter, Ashley M. Price, John Barnes, Juliana DaSilva, Rebecca Kondor, Sascha Ellington, Brendan Flannery

2024Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The 2022-23 US influenza season peaked early in fall 2022. METHODS: Late-season influenza vaccine effectiveness (VE) against outpatient, laboratory-confirmed influenza was calculated among participants of the US Influenza VE Network using a test-negative design. RESULTS: Of 2561 participants enrolled from December 12, 2022 to April 30, 2023, 91 laboratory-confirmed influenza cases primarily had A(H1N1)pdm09 (6B.1A.5a.2a.1) or A(H3N2) (3C.2a1b.2a.2b). Overall, VE was 30% (95% confidence interval -9%, 54%); low late-season activity precluded estimation for most subgroups. CONCLUSIONS: 2022-23 late-season outpatient influenza VE was not statistically significant. Genomic characterization may improve the identification of influenza viruses that circulate postinfluenza peak.

Topics & Concepts

Influenza seasonConfidence intervalInfluenza vaccineMedicineOutpatient clinicOutpatient visitsInfluenza-like illnessSeasonal influenzaInfluenza A virusFlu seasonInternal medicineVirologyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)VirusVaccinationInfectious disease (medical specialty)DiseaseHealth careEconomic growthEconomicsInfluenza Virus Research StudiesRespiratory viral infections researchData-Driven Disease Surveillance