Influenza Vaccination and Mortality: Differentiating Vaccine Effects From Bias

被引:163
作者
Fireman, Bruce [1 ]
Lee, Janelle [1 ]
Lewis, Ned [1 ]
Bembom, Oliver [2 ,3 ]
van der Laan, Mark
Baxter, Roger [1 ]
机构
[1] Kaiser Permanente, Vaccine Studies Ctr & Div Res, Oakland, CA 94612 USA
[2] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Biostat, Berkeley, CA USA
[3] Target Analyt, Berkeley, CA USA
关键词
aged; epidemiologic methods; influenza; human; influenza vaccines; mortality; selection bias; ELDERLY-PEOPLE; IMPACT; BENEFITS; COHORT; RISK;
D O I
10.1093/aje/kwp173
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
It is widely believed that influenza (flu) vaccination of the elderly reduces all-cause mortality, yet randomized trials for assessing vaccine effectiveness are not feasible and the observational research has been controversial. Efforts to differentiate vaccine effectiveness from selection bias have been problematic. The authors examined mortality before, during, and after 9 flu seasons in relation to time-varying vaccination status in an elderly California population in which 115,823 deaths occurred from 1996 to 2005, including 20,484 deaths during laboratory-defined flu seasons. Vaccine coverage averaged 63%; excess mortality when the flu virus was circulating averaged 7.8%. In analyses that omitted weeks when flu circulated, the odds ratio measuring the vaccination-mortality association increased monotonically from 0.34 early in November to 0.56 in January, 0.67 in April, and 0.76 in August. This reflects the trajectory of selection effects in the absence of flu. In analyses that included weeks with flu and adjustment for selection effects, flu season multiplied the odds ratio by 0.954. The corresponding vaccine effectiveness estimate was 4.6% (95% confidence interval: 0.7, 8.3). To differentiate vaccine effects from selection bias, the authors used logistic regression with a novel case-centered specification that may be useful in other population-based studies when the exposure-outcome association varies markedly over time.
引用
收藏
页码:650 / 656
页数:7
相关论文
共 24 条
  • [1] Angrist JD, 2009, MOSTLY HARMLESS ECONOMETRICS: AN EMPIRICISTS COMPANION, P1
  • [2] Effect of influenza vaccination on excess deaths occurring during periods of high circulation of influenza: cohort study in elderly people
    Armstrong, BG
    Mangtani, P
    Fletcher, A
    Kovats, S
    McMichael, A
    Pattenden, S
    Wilkinson, P
    [J]. BMJ-BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2004, 329 (7467): : 660 - 663
  • [3] Evidence of bias in estimates of influenza vaccine effectiveness in seniors
    Jackson, LA
    Jackson, ML
    Nelson, JC
    Neuzil, KM
    Weiss, NS
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2006, 35 (02) : 337 - 344
  • [4] Functional status is a confounder of the association of influenza vaccine and risk of all cause mortality in seniors
    Jackson, LA
    Nelson, JC
    Benson, P
    Neuzil, KM
    Reid, RJ
    Psaty, BM
    Heckbert, SR
    Larson, EB
    Weiss, NS
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2006, 35 (02) : 345 - 352
  • [5] Benefits of examining influenza vaccine associations outside of influenza season
    Jackson, Lisa A.
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY AND CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2008, 178 (05) : 439 - 440
  • [6] Influenza vaccination and risk of community-acquired pneumonia in immunocompetent elderly people: a population-based, nested case-control study
    Jackson, Michael L.
    Nelson, Jennifer C.
    Weiss, Noel S.
    Neuzil, Kathleen M.
    Barlow, William
    Jackson, Lisa A.
    [J]. LANCET, 2008, 372 (9636) : 398 - 405
  • [7] Epidemiology of influenza
    Monto, Arnold S.
    [J]. VACCINE, 2008, 26 : D45 - D48
  • [8] New strategies are needed to improve the accuracy of influenza vaccine effectiveness estimates among seniors
    Nelson, Jennifer Clark
    Jackson, Michael L.
    Weiss, Noel. S.
    Jackson, Lisa A.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2009, 62 (07) : 687 - 694
  • [9] Influenza vaccination and reduction in hospitalizations for cardiac disease and stroke among the elderly
    Nichol, KL
    Nordin, J
    Mullooly, J
    Lask, R
    Fillbrandt, K
    Iwane, M
    [J]. NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 2003, 348 (14) : 1322 - 1332
  • [10] THE EFFICACY AND COST-EFFECTIVENESS OF VACCINATION AGAINST INFLUENZA AMONG ELDERLY PERSONS LIVING IN THE COMMUNITY
    NICHOL, KL
    MARGOLIS, KL
    WUORENMA, J
    VONSTERNBERG, T
    [J]. NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 1994, 331 (12) : 778 - 784