Age-specific vaccination coverage estimates for influenza, human papillomavirus and measles containing vaccines from seven population-based healthcare databases from four EU countries - The ADVANCE project
Publication date
2020-04-03
Authors
Braeye, Toon
Emborg, Hanne-Dorthe
Llorente-García, Ana
Huerta, Consuelo
Martín-Merino, Elisa
Duarte-Salles, Talita
Danieli, Giorgia
Tramontan, Lara
Weibel, Daniel
McGee, Chris
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Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Accelerated Development of VAccine beNefit-risk Collaboration in Europe (ADVANCE) is a public-private collaboration aiming to develop and test a system for rapid benefit-risk monitoring of vaccines using existing healthcare databases in Europe. We estimated vaccine coverage from electronic healthcare databases as part of a fit-for-purpose assessment for vaccine benefit-risk studies. METHODS: A retrospective dynamic cohort study was conducted through a distributed network approach. Coverage with measles-vaccine for birth year 2006, human papillomavirus (HPV)-vaccine for birth years 1990-2000 and influenza-vaccine for birth years 1920-1950 was estimated using period-prevalence and inverse probability weighting methods. Seven databases from four countries participated: Italy (Pedianet, Val Padana), Spain (BIFAP, SIDIAP), UK (RCGP-RSC, THIN), Denmark (SSI/AUH). Database access providers extracted the data, transformed it into a common structure and ran an R-script locally. The created output tables were shared and pooled at a central server. RESULTS: The total study population comprised 274,616 persons for measles-vaccine, 2,011,666 persons for HPV-vaccine and 14,904,033 persons for influenza-vaccine. Measles-vaccine coverage varied from 84.3% (Denmark) to 96.5% (Italy, Val Padana) for the first dose and from 82.8% (Italy, Val Padana) to 90.9% (UK) for the second dose at the age of 7 years. The HPV-vaccine coverage, aggregated over birth years 1997-2000, ranged from 60% (UK) to 88.3% (Denmark) at the age of 15 years. The influenza-vaccine coverage for the influenza seasons from 2009 to 2015 for persons aged 65 years and more was roughly stable around 43% in Denmark and around 68% in the UK while a decrease from 58 to 50% was observed in Catalonia (Spain). CONCLUSIONS: We obtained detailed, age-specific coverage estimates though a common procedure. We discussed between database comparability and comparability to published national estimates.
Keywords
Adolescent, Age Factors, Aged, Alphapapillomavirus, Child, Cohort Studies, Delivery of Health Care, Europe/epidemiology, Humans, Influenza, Human/epidemiology, Italy/epidemiology, Measles, Papillomaviridae, Papillomavirus Vaccines, Pertussis Vaccine, Retrospective Studies, Spain, Vaccination, Vaccination Coverage, Influenza vaccines, Measles vaccines, Probability, Papillomavirus vaccines, Vaccination coverage, General Veterinary, Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health, Infectious Diseases, Molecular Medicine, General Immunology and Microbiology, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't, Journal Article
Citation
Braeye, T, Emborg, H-D, Llorente-García, A, Huerta, C, Martín-Merino, E, Duarte-Salles, T, Danieli, G, Tramontan, L, Weibel, D, McGee, C, Villa, M, Gini, R, Lehtinen, M, Titievsky, L & Sturkenboom, M 2020, 'Age-specific vaccination coverage estimates for influenza, human papillomavirus and measles containing vaccines from seven population-based healthcare databases from four EU countries - The ADVANCE project', Vaccine, vol. 38, no. 16, pp. 3243-3254. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2020.02.082