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Monitoring the Effectiveness of Pandemic Influenza Vaccines. VRBPAC, February 27, 2007 David K. Shay, MD, MPH Epidemiology and Prevention Branch, Influenza Division (proposed) Centers for Disease Control & Prevention. Pandemic Vaccines: Background.
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Monitoring the Effectiveness of Pandemic Influenza Vaccines VRBPAC, February 27, 2007 David K. Shay, MD, MPH Epidemiology and Prevention Branch, Influenza Division (proposed) Centers for Disease Control & Prevention
Pandemic Vaccines: Background • Limited immunogenicity and safety data will be available prior to distribution of a pandemic vaccine • Safety monitoring will be essential • Post-licensure safety studies can begin with pre-pandemic use of each product, and continue throughout the vaccine program • If desired, post-licensure immunogenicity data could be collected in the pre-pandemic setting
Pandemic Vaccines: Background • Data concerning clinical effectiveness of pandemic vaccines will be essential • Immunogenicity and protection from illness imperfectly correlated • Different populations may receive vaccine in pre- and post-licensure situations • Vaccine match, need to change strain • But obviously must await onset of the pandemic and illness in populations eligible for vaccination
Pandemic Vaccine Effectiveness • Effectiveness: protection against influenza illness when vaccine is administered in an immunization program • Effectiveness may vary by age, medical history, and immunocompetence of patient • Effectiveness may vary with outcomes • Lower for non-specific illnesses that can be caused by pathogens other than the pandemic virus • May vary by severity: illness, hospitalization, need for mechanical ventilation, death • Need to assess effectiveness after 1 and 2 doses of vaccine
CDC’s Existing Influenza VE Projects: Base for Pandemic VE Assessments • Two projects build on existing surveillance systems for influenza • Emerging Infections Program (EIP) • New Vaccine Surveillance Network (NVSN) • Project with Marshfield Clinic was funded to provide rapid, within season estimates of VE against a laboratory-confirmed outcome • All use laboratory-confirmed influenza outcomes
Population-Based Influenza Surveillance • EIP – 12 sites • Children <18 yrs hospitalized with laboratory-confirmed influenza infection • Adult surveillance began January 2006 • NVSN – 3 sites • Children <5 yrs with inpatient or outpatient laboratory-confirmed influenza infection • Outpatient surveillance in 6-12 yrs started this season
Underlying Rationale for Pandemic Vaccine Prioritization • Everyone will be susceptible • US-based production capacity is not currently sufficient to provide vaccine rapidly for the entire population • Earliest doses of vaccine can be projected as becoming available at ~20 weeks after isolation and characterization of the pandemic virus
ACIP/NVAC Priority Groups • Joint work of the two HHS committees • Process included consideration of • Estimates of vaccine supply and effectiveness • Effects of pandemic by age and risk group • Potential effects on critical infrastructure and health care • Recommendations included in the 2005 HHS pandemic plan • As guidance for State/local planning • To promote further discussion
Top 2 ACIP/NVAC Priority Groups 1.A. Vaccine and antiviral manufacturers and others essential to manufacturing and critical support (~40,000) Medical workers and public health workers who are involved in direct patient contact, other support services essential for direct patient care, and vaccinators (8-9 million) 1.B. Persons > 65 years with 1 or more influenza high-risk conditions, not including essential hypertension (approximately 18.2 million) Persons 6 months to 64 years with 2 or more influenza high-risk conditions, not including essential hypertension (approximately 6.9 million) Persons 6 months or older with history of hospitalization for pneumonia or influenza or other influenza high-risk condition in the past year (740,000)
Interagency Pandemic Vaccine Prioritization Working Group • Participants from multiple federal agencies • Consideration of ACIP/NVAC recommendations • Consideration of National Infrastructure Advisory Council recommendations on critical infrastructure • Public engagement meetings and stakeholder meeting
Summary of 2 Public Engagement and Stakeholder Meetings • At each of the 3 meetings, the most highly rated goals were the same • Maintaining critical societal functions • Protecting those who would help others during a pandemic • Protecting children as “our future” • Most other goals were considered moderately important • Including protecting those most likely to get sick or die during a pandemic • Ratings and rank order varied between meetings
Pandemic Vaccine Prioritization Interagency WG: Next Steps • Draft prioritization guidance developed • Public & stakeholder meetings • Written comments • ACIP updated by Ben Schwartz, NVPO • The working group also will consider • Pre-pandemic vaccine prioritization • Modifying guidance at the time of a pandemic • Final guidance expected by May
Monitoring Pandemic Vaccine Effectiveness: 1 • Lab-confirmed outcomes will be studied • Hospitalizations captured in several systems • Additional more severe outcomes (e.g, all-cause mortality) may also be studied • Observational studies must collect data on possible confounding factors • Selection bias likely, but cannot assume direction • Need to link existing individual health data to vaccination and outcome data
Monitoring Pandemic Vaccine Effectiveness: 2 • Plans will evolve as vaccine priorities develop • Existing systems cover children well • Community-based studies may not be efficient if initial vaccine is prioritized to a few critical infrastructure sectors • Vaccine distribution and tracking methods • State, regional registries may be used to identify vaccinated individuals • Need to link pandemic vaccine receipt back to medical and demographic data
Monitoring Pandemic Vaccine Effectiveness: 3 • CDC will expand existing systems • Assess effectiveness among adults in EIP system • Rapid assessment methods in other sites • Potential for new systems • Consider using sentinel provider system and point-of-care tests being developed • CDC will work with governmental and other partners to meet needs for effectiveness data
Acknowledgments • Emerging Infections Program sites • CA • CO • CT • GA • OR • TN • Marshfield Clinic Research Foundation • New Vaccine Surveillance Network sites • Children’s Hospital Medical Center Cincinnati • University of Rochester • Vanderbilt University • Ben Schwartz • Joe Bresee • Tony Fiore • Nancy Cox
Basis for ACIP/NVAC Prioritization • Primary goal to mitigate adverse health outcomes • Pandemic severity assumptions • 20-30% attack rate; up to 1% case fatality rate • Certain benefit of vaccinating high-risk versus unclear benefit of vaccinating critical infrastructure • Estimate of 10-15% absenteeism due to illness or caring for ill family members at pandemic peak • Much greater mortality risk among vulnerable persons than general population
ACIP/NVAC Priority GroupsPersonnel Cumulative Element and Tier (1,000’s) total (1,000’s)
Rationale for Reconsideration of Pandemic Vaccine Prioritization • Public engagement meetings • Preserving essential services ranked as top goal • Evolving planning assumptions • More severe pandemic • Evolving pandemic response strategies • Community mitigation guidance • Additional analysis of critical infrastructures
EIP Surveillance Areas California: Kaiser Northern California members in 3 county San Francisco Bay area, and non-Kaiser children aged <2 years Colorado: 5 county Denver area Connecticut: 1 county New Haven area Georgia: 8 county Atlanta area Maryland: 5 county Baltimore area and Baltimore City Minnesota: 7 county Minneapolis area New Mexico: 1 county in Albuquerque area and 3 county Las Cruces area New York: 8 county Albany area and 7 county Rochester area Oregon: 3 county Portland area Tennessee: 8 county Nashville area Total: 4.7 million children aged <18, or ~7% of US population
NVSV Surveillance Areas Children aged <5 years in these communities: Monroe County, New York: 43,720 Davidson County, Tennessee: 56,466 Hamilton County, Ohio: 44,002 Total 144,188
Marshfield Clinic Population • The influenza study cohort was drawn from the Marshfield Epidemiologic Study Area (MESA), a dynamic, population-based cohort of approximately 54,000 residents living in 14 zip-codes surrounding Marshfield, Wisconsin • Nearly all MESA residents receive all inpatient and outpatient care from Marshfield Clinic facilities, which use an electronic medical record that captures 90% of outpatient visits, 99% of deaths, and 95% of hospital discharges for the population • The 2004-05 study cohort included 11,565 people, including 1,881 (16%) with a clinical encounter for acute respiratory illness based on diagnosis codes in the electronic medical record during the 12-week study period • The 2005-06 study cohort included 18,542 residents