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Brand-specific estimates of influenza vaccine effectiveness for the 2021–2022 season in Europe: results from the DRIVE multi-stakeholder study platform

Authors :
Anke L. Stuurman
Antonio Carmona
Jorne Biccler
Alexandre Descamps
Miriam Levi
Ulrike Baum
Ainara Mira-Iglesias
Stefania Bellino
Uy Hoang
Simon de Lusignan
Roberto Bonaiuti
Bruno Lina
Caterina Rizzo
Hanna Nohynek
Javier Díez-Domingo
DRIVE Study Contributors
Anca Cristina Drăgănescu
Oana Săndulescu
Daniela Piţigoi
Victor Daniel Miron
Anca Streinu-Cercel
Anuţa Bilaşco
Adrian Streinu-Cercel
Dragoş Florea
Ovidiu Vlaicu
Simona Paraschiv
Leontina Bănică
Dan Oţelea
Monika Redlberger-Fritz
Eva Geringer
Amparo López-Bernus
Ana Haro Perez
Nieves Gutierrez Zufiaurre
Cristina Carbonell Muñoz
Miguel Marcos Martin
Muñoz Juan Luis Bellido
Isabel Gil Rodríguez
Antonio Muro Alvarez
Moncef Belhassen Garcia
Giancarlo Icardi
Stefano Mosca
Donatella Panatto
Emanuele Montomoli
Silvana Castaldi
Andrea Orsi
Alexander Domnich
Maria Chironna
Daniela Loconsole
Ilaria Manini
Christian Napoli
Alessandra Torsello
Elena Pariani
and Piero Luigi Lai
Susana Otero-Romero
Andrés Antón Pagarolas
Cristina Andrés
Ingrid Carbonés
Oleguer Pares
Mar Fornaguera
Anna Oller
Xavier Salgado
Patricia Tejerina
Cristina Martinez
Alejandro Orrico-Sánchez
F. Xavier López-Labrador
Beatriz Mengual-Chuliá
Judit Sánchez Soler
María Jinglei Casanova Palomino
Juan Mollar-Maseres
Miguel Tortajada-Girbés
Noelia Rodríguez-Blanco
Mario Carballido-Fernández
Raquel Andreu Ivorra
Àngels Sierra Fortuny
Beatriz Segura Segura
Cristina Mingot Ureta
Sagrario Corrales Díaz-Flores
Ángela Sánchez Pla
María Dolores Tirado Balaguer
Juan Alberola
José Miguel Nogueira
Juan J Camarena
Francisco Arjona-Zaragozí
Maruan Shalabi Benavent
José Luis López-Hontangas
María Dolores Gómez
Alejandro Martín-Quirós
Carlos Cañada Illana
Emilio Cendejas
Irma Casas García
Guillermo Mena Pinilla
María Esteve Pardo
Lola Álamo Junquera
Cristina Casañ
Sandra Fernandez Morodo
Agueda Hernández
Pere-Joan Cardona
Marta Segura
Andreu C. Pelegrin
Sara González-Gómez
Verónica Saludes
Elisa Martró
Valtýr Stefánsson Thors
Kristín L. Björnsdóttir
Liem Luong
Zineb Lesieur
Yacine Saidi
Rebecca Bauer
Christine Pereira
Philippe Vanhems
Fabrice Lainé
Florence Galtier
Xavier Duval
Christine Durier
Paolo Bonanni
Alfredo Vannacci
Claudia Ravaldi
Source :
Frontiers in Public Health, Vol 11 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2023.

Abstract

IntroductionDevelopment of Robust and Innovative Vaccine Effectiveness (DRIVE) was a European public–private partnership (PPP) that aimed to provide annual, brand-specific estimates of influenza vaccine effectiveness (IVE) for regulatory and public health purposes. DRIVE was launched in 2017 under the umbrella of the Innovative Medicines Initiative (IMI) and conducted IVE studies from its pilot season in 2017–2018 to its final season in 2021–2022.MethodsIn 2021–2022, DRIVE conducted four primary care-based test-negative design (TND) studies (Austria, Italy, Iceland, and England; involving >1,000 general practitioners), nine hospital-based TND studies (France, Iceland, Italy, Romania, and Spain, for a total of 21 hospitals), and one population-based cohort study in Finland. In the TND studies, patients with influenza-like illness (primary care) or severe acute respiratory infection (hospital) were enrolled, and laboratory tested for influenza using RT-PCR. Study contributor-specific IVE was calculated using logistic regression, adjusting for age, sex, and calendar time, and pooled by meta-analysis.ResultsIn 2021–2022, pooled confounder-adjusted influenza vaccine effectiveness (IVE) estimates against laboratory-confirmed influenza (LCI) overall and per type and subtype/lineage was produced, albeit with wide confidence intervals (CI). The limited circulation of influenza in Europe did not allow the network to reach the optimal sample size to produce precise IVE estimates for all the brands included. The most significant IVE estimates were 76% (95% CI 23%−93%) for any vaccine and 81% (22%−95%) for Vaxigrip Tetra in adults ≥65 years old and 64% (25%−83%) for Fluenz Tetra in children (TND primary care setting), 85% (12%−97%) for any vaccine in adults 18–64 years (TND hospital setting), and 38% (1%−62%) in children 6 months−6 years (population-based cohort, mixed setting).DiscussionOver five seasons, DRIVE collected data on >35,000 patients, more than 60 variables, and 13 influenza vaccines. DRIVE demonstrated that estimating brand-specific IVE across Europe is possible, but achieving sufficient sample size to obtain precise estimates for all relevant stratifications remains a challenge. Finally, DRIVE's network of study contributors and lessons learned have greatly contributed to the development of the COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness platform COVIDRIVE.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22962565
Volume :
11
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Frontiers in Public Health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.75fb3f72a3704f36bf12c2869d3a6c12
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2023.1195409