Litcius/Paper detail

Effectiveness of Influenza Vaccination in Preventing Hospitalization Due to Influenza in Children: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis

Nicki L. Boddington, Isabelle Pearson, Heather Whitaker, Punam Mangtani, Richard Pebody

2021Clinical Infectious Diseases47 citationsDOI

Abstract

This systematic review assesses the literature for estimates of influenza vaccine effectiveness (IVE) against laboratory-confirmed influenza-associated hospitalization in children. Studies of any design to June 8, 2020, were included if the outcome was hospitalization, participants were 17 years or younger and influenza infection was laboratory-confirmed. A random-effects meta-analysis of 37 studies that used a test-negative design gave a pooled seasonal IVE against hospitalization of 53.3% (47.2-58.8) for any influenza. IVE was higher against influenza A/H1N1pdm09 (68.7%, 56.9-77.2) and lowest against influenza A/H3N2 (35.8%, 23.4-46.3). Estimates by vaccine type ranged from 44.3% (30.1-55.7) for live-attenuated influenza vaccines to 68.9% (53.6-79.2) for inactivated vaccines. IVE estimates were higher in seasons when the circulating influenza strains were antigenically matched to vaccine strains (59.3%, 48.3-68.0). Influenza vaccination gives moderate overall protection against influenza-associated hospitalization in children supporting annual vaccination. IVE varies by influenza subtype and vaccine type.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineVaccinationInfluenza vaccineMeta-analysisLive attenuated influenza vaccineSeasonal influenzaImmunizationVirologyImmunologyPediatricsInternal medicineCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)AntigenDiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)Influenza Virus Research StudiesRespiratory viral infections researchPneumonia and Respiratory Infections