1 / 27

Influenza and Influenza Vaccine

Influenza and Influenza Vaccine. Epidemiology and Prevention of Vaccine-Preventable Diseases National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Revised May 2009. Influenza Antigenic Changes. Antigenic Shift major change, new subtype

tovi
Download Presentation

Influenza and Influenza Vaccine

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Influenza and Influenza Vaccine Epidemiology and Prevention of Vaccine-Preventable Diseases National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Revised May 2009

  2. Influenza Antigenic Changes • Antigenic Shift • major change, new subtype • caused by exchange of gene segments • may result in pandemic • Example of antigenic shift • H2N2 virus circulated in 1957-1967 • H3N2 virus appeared in 1968 and completely replaced H2N2 virus

  3. Influenza Antigenic Changes • Antigenic Drift • minor change, same subtype • caused by point mutations in gene • may result in epidemic • Example of antigenic drift • in 2002-2003, A/Panama/2007/99 (H3N2) virus was dominant • A/Fujian/411/2002 (H3N2) appeared in late 2003 and caused widespread illness in 2003-2004

  4. Influenza Clinical Features • Incubation period 2 days (range 1-4 days) • Abrupt onset of fever, myalgia, sore throat, nonproductive cough, headache • Severity of illness depends on prior experience with related variants

  5. Influenza Complications • Pneumonia • secondary bacterial • primary influenza viral • Reye syndrome • Myocarditis • Death 0.5-1 per 1,000 cases

  6. Impact of Influenza-United States, 1990-1999 • Approximately 36,000 influenza-associated deaths during each influenza season • Persons 65 years of age and older account for more than 90% of deaths • Higher mortality during seasons when influenza type A (H3N2) viruses predominate

  7. Impact of Influenza-United States, 1990-1999 • Highest rates of complications and hospitalization among young children and person 65 years and older • Average of more than 200,000 influenza-related excess hospitalizations • 57% of hospitalizations among persons younger than 65 years of age • Greater number of hospitalizations during type A (H3N2) epidemics

  8. Influenza Among School-Aged Children • School-aged children • typically have the highest attack rates during community outbreaks of influenza • serve as a major source of transmission of influenza within communities

  9. Month of Peak Influenza Activity United States, 1976-2008 47% 19% 13% 13% 3% 3% MMWR 2006;55:22

  10. Influenza Vaccines • Inactivated subunit (TIV) • intramuscular • trivalent • split virus and subunit types • duration of immunity 1 year or less • Live attenuated vaccine (LAIV) • intranasal • trivalent • duration of immunity at least 1 year

  11. Inactivated Influenza Vaccine Efficacy • 70%-90% effective among healthy persons younger than 65 years of age • 30%-40% effective among frail elderly persons • 50%-60% effective in preventing hospitalization • 80% effective in preventing death

  12. Vaccinated* Unvaccinated Influenza and Complications Among Nursing Home Residents RR=1.9 RR=2.0 RR=2.5 RR=4.2 *Inactivated influenza vaccine. Genesee County, MI, 1982-1983

  13. LAIV Efficacy in Healthy Children • 87% effective against culture-confirmed influenza in children 5-7 years old • 27% reduction in febrile otitis media (OM) • 28% reduction in OM with accompanying antibiotic use • Decreased fever and OM in vaccine recipients who developed influenza

  14. LAIV Efficacy in Healthy Adults • 20% fewer severe febrile illness episodes • 24% fewer febrile upper respiratory illness episodes • 27% fewer lost work days due to febrile upper respiratory illness • 18%-37% fewer days of healthcare provider visits due to febrile illness • 41%-45% fewer days of antibiotic use

  15. Timing of Influenza Vaccine Programs • Influenza activity can occur as early as October • In more than 80% of seasons since 1976, peak influenza activity has not occurred until January or later • In more than 60% of seasons the peak was in February or later

  16. Timing of Influenza Vaccine Programs • Providers should begin offering vaccine soon after it becomes available, if possible by October • To avoid missed opportunities for vaccination, providers should offer vaccine during routine healthcare visits or during hospitalizations whenever vaccine is available

  17. Dose 0.25 mL 0.50 mL 0.50 mL Age Group 6-35 mos 3-8 yrs >9 yrs No. Doses 1* or 2 1* or 2 1 Inactivated Influenza Vaccine Schedule *Only one dose is needed if the child received 2 doses of influenza vaccine during the previous influenza season

  18. Influenza Vaccination of Children • Children 6 months through 8 years of age who did not receive the recommended second dose of influenza vaccine in the initial year that they received influenza vaccine should receive 2 doses during the next influenza season* • Children 6 months through 8 years of age who are being vaccinated two or more seasons after receiving an influenza vaccine for the first time should receive a single annual dose, regardless of the number of doses administered previously *applies only to the influenza season that follows the first season that a child younger than 9 years receives influenza vaccine

  19. Influenza Vaccination Schedule • All children younger than 9 years receiving seasonal influenza vaccine for the first time this season should receive 2 doses, separated by 4 weeks • Children younger than 9 years who received a seasonal vaccine for the first time last season but who received only 1 dose should receive 2 doses this season MMWR 2010;59 (early release) From the Immunization Update 2010 webcast (originally broadcast August 5, 2010

  20. Influenza Vaccination Schedule • Children younger than 9 years who did not receive at least 1 dose of a 2009 monovalent vaccine should receive 2 doses of seasonal vaccine this season • Children younger than 9 years whose 2009 pandemic vaccine history is not known should receive 2 doses this season MMWR 2010;59 (early release) From the Immunization Update 2010 webcast (originally broadcast August 5, 2010

  21. Live Attenuated Influenza VaccineIndications • Healthy*, nonpregnant persons 2 through 49 years of age, including • healthy children • healthcare personnel • persons in close contact with high-risk groups • persons who want to reduce their risk of influenza *Persons who do not have medical conditions that increase their risk for complications of influenza

  22. Fluzone High-Dose TIV • Approved only for persons 65 years of age or older • Each dose contains 4 times as much hemagglutinin as the regular formulation of Fluzone for adults • ACIP has not expressed a preference for the high dose Fluzone formulation or any other inactivated vaccine for use in persons 65 years and older MMWR 2010;59 (early release) From the Immunization Update 2010 webcast (originally broadcast August 5, 2010

  23. Inactivated Influenza Vaccine Adverse Reactions Local reactions 15%-20% Fever, malaise not common Allergic reactions rare Neurological very rare reactions

  24. Live Attenuated Influenza VaccineAdverse Reactions • Children • no significant increase in URI symptoms, fever, or other systemic symptoms • significantly increased risk of asthma or reactive airways disease in children 12-59 months of age • Adults • significantly increased rate of cough, runny nose, nasal congestion, sore throat, and chills reported among vaccine recipients • no increase in the occurrence of fever • No serious adverse reactions identified

  25. Inactivated Influenza VaccineContraindications and Precautions • Severe allergic reaction to a vaccine component (e.g., egg) or following a prior dose of vaccine • Moderate or severe acute illness • History of Guillian Barré syndrome within 6 weeks following a previous dose of TIV (precaution)

  26. Live Attenuated Influenza VaccineContraindications and Precautions • Children younger than 2 years of age* • Persons 50 years of age or older* • Persons with chronic medical conditions* • Children and adolescents receiving long-term aspirin therapy* *These persons should receive inactivated influenza vaccine

  27. Live Attenuated Influenza VaccineContraindications and Precautions • Immunosuppression from any cause* • Pregnant women* • Severe (anaphylactic) allergy to egg or other vaccine components • History of Guillian-Barré syndrome • Children younger than 5 years with recurrent wheezing* • Moderate or severe acute illness *These persons should receive inactivated influenza vaccine

More Related