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Routine infant vaccination of pneumococcal conjugate vaccines has decreased pneumonia across all age groups in Northern Spain

RIVERO CALLE, IRENE; Pardo Seco, Jacobo José; Raguindin ., Peter Francis; Alvez González, Fernando; GOMEZ RIAL, JOSE; Salas Ellacuriaga, Antonio; Martinón Sánchez, José María; Martinón Torres, Federico
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URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11940/15536
PMID: 31851569
DOI: 10.1080/21645515.2019.1690884
ISSN: 2164-5515
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Hum Vaccin Immunother. 2020 Jun 2;16(6):1446-1453. doi: 10.1080/21645515.2019.1690884. Epub 2019 Dec 18. (1.368Mb)
Data de publicación
2019
Título da revista
Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics 
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Since the early 2000s, pneumococcal conjugate vaccines (PCVs) have been shown to be effective in the prevention of pneumonia and invasive pneumococcal diseases. In 2011, the Galician region incorporated PCV in the routine infant immunization, the very first stable program in Spain. We aim to assess direct and indirect benefits of PCV vaccination on all-cause pneumonia in the region across different age groups using an ecological study design. For this, we calculated the annual hospitalization rates using a hospital-based disease registry. We identified all-cause pneumonia, pneumococcal pneumonia and pneumococcal invasive diseases within the registry. Hospitalization rates were computed and compared across three study periods: pre-vaccination (1998-2003), early-vaccination (2005-2009) and routine-vaccination (2011-2015). Across Northern Spain, we identified 114,873 all-cause pneumonia hospitalizations, of which 24,808 were further diagnosed with pneumococcal pneumonia. The majority were elderly > 64 years (67.3%). Hospitalizations from all-cause pneumonia had a net increase from 20.6 (pre-PCV) and 21.4/10,000 (early) to 28.4/10,000 (routine) (+32.7%, p < .0001), this is attributed to the huge number of cases in the elderly age group. In contrast, a net reduction of incidence of hospitalized pneumococcal pneumonia was observed from 6.3/10,000 (pre-PCV) and 5.7/10,000 (early) to 2.4/10,000 (routine) cases (-57.9%, p < .0001). Thus, routine infant vaccination may have resulted to an overall decline of pneumococcal pneumonia in infants, as well as in elderly age groups. However, a paradoxical increase on all-cause pneumonia was observed in Galicia, mostly attributed to the growing number of cases in the elderly population.

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