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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Influenza vaccine effectiveness in preventing outpatient, inpatient, and severe cases of laboratory-confirmed influenza.

Ivan J. FernandezJ. L. ViejoMaretva BaricotF. DíezF. ZafraC. TortajadaF. MartínI. PedrosaM. E. UrsuaJ. GamboaFernando González-candelasJoaquin Lopez-contrerasVicente MartinJosé Luis LoboD. CarriedoI. GarcaOlatz GarinSonia FernandezM. T. VirtoE PérezM. F. BautistaJ. RuizA. MorilloJuan Carlos GalánA. EscobarVirginia PomarC.j. ÁLvarezM. C. UbagoJ. R. PañoNúria TornerJenaro AstrayJesus CastillaS GarcíaM. RuizS. SánchezMiguel Delgado-rodríguezFrancisco PozoLuis E. MartinezJoan A. CaylàA. SecoAngela DomínguezJ. KortaJoaquim GeaL. BlanchP. SanzA. PueyoJosé María MayoralJorge CarrilloMercedes MartínezR. MoyanoAntoni TrillaA. VilellaTomás PumarolaJ. A. NavarroF. Pérez-afonsoE. GilJ. M. NavarroF. J. TroyaMartínez-baz IvánCristina Carranza RodríguezPere GodoyJosé M. QuintanaM. T. PuigJ. M. AntoñanaE. Pérez TralleroNúria SoldevilaGustavo CillaP. FanloMaria MoralesM. García BarqueroTania FernándezJordi AlonsoAntonio J. MolinaUrko AguirreJuan Pablo HorcajadaM. VázquezE. AzorA. RobustilloFrancisco GilFernando MoragaR. GénovaFrancesc CalafellJavier AristeguiR. Ortiz De LejarazuA. HernándezN. HayesS. JiménezA. AgustíX. BonfillTamames SoniaVirtudes GallardoM. SotaJ. CastrodezaJ. R. MaldonadoG. NavarroA. MartinezAdy CastroE. BorràsA. PérezJuan José García GarcíaPedro Pablo EspañaA. CaspelasteguiItziar AstigarragaJ. DorcaAmaia BilbaoFerran BarbéP. RedondoRafael CantónMiriam PerezMarc SaezVíctor Martínez-artola

subject

Microbiology (medical)AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentInfluenza vaccineLower riskLogistic regressionYoung AdultPregnancyInternal medicineIntensive careInfluenza HumanOutpatientsmedicineHumansIntensive care medicineChildAgedAged 80 and overCross InfectionInpatientsbusiness.industryConfoundingInfant Newbornvirus diseasesInfantOdds ratioMiddle AgedPrognosisConfidence intervalVaccinationCommunity-Acquired InfectionsHospitalizationInfectious DiseasesInfluenza VaccinesSpainCase-Control StudiesChild PreschoolFemalebusiness

description

Background. In most seasons, the influenza vaccine is effective in preventing influenza, but it is not clear whether it is equally effective in preventing mild and severe cases. We designed a case-control study to compare the effectiveness of the influenza vaccine in preventing outpatient, inpatient, and severe or fatal cases of laboratory-confirmed influenza. Methods. Hospitalized patients (n = 691) with laboratory-confirmed influenza in the 2010–2011 season recruited in 29 Spanish hospitals were individually matched by age, admission/visit date, and province with an outpatient with laboratory-confirmed influenza and an outpatient control. Severe cases were considered those patients admitted to intensive care units or who died in the hospital (n = 177). We compared the influenza vaccine status of controls and outpatient cases, inpatient cases, and severe cases using conditional logistic regression adjusted for potential confounding factors. Severe and nonsevere inpatient influenza cases were compared using unconditional logistic regression. Vaccine effectiveness was (1 – odds ratio) × 100. Results. Vaccine effectiveness was 75% (adjusted odds ratio [AOR], 0.25; 95% confidence interval [CI], .16–.39) in preventing influenza outpatient cases, 60% (AOR, 0.40; 95% CI, .25–.63) in preventing influenza-associated hospitalizations, and 89% (AOR, 0.11; 95% CI, .04–.37) in preventing severe cases. In inpatients, influenza vaccination was associated with a lower risk of severe influenza (AOR, 0.42; 95% CI, .22–.80). Conclusions. Influenza vaccination prevented influenza cases and hospitalizations and was associated with a better prognosis in inpatients with influenza. The combined effect of these 2 mechanisms would explain the high effectiveness of the vaccine in preventing severe cases due to influenza.

10.1093/cid/cit194https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23532475