Influenza Vaccine Effectiveness in the Elderly Based on Administrative Databases: Change in Immunization Habit as a Marker for Bias

PLoS One, Vol. 6, No. 7, July 2011

13 Pages Posted: 6 Jan 2012

See all articles by Travis Hottes

Travis Hottes

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Danuta Skowronski

British Columbia Centre for Disease Control

Brett Hiebert

University of Manitoba - Manitoba Centre for Health Policy

Naveed Z. Janjua

Aga Khan University

L. L. Roos

University of Manitoba - Manitoba Centre for Health Policy

Paul Van Caeseele

University of Manitoba - Max Rady College of Medicine

Barbara Law

Public Health Agency of Canada

Gaston De Serres

Université Laval - Faculty of Medicine

Date Written: July 4, 2011

Abstract

Background: Administrative databases provide efficient methods to estimate influenza vaccine effectiveness (IVE) against severe outcomes in the elderly but are prone to intractable bias. This study returns to one of the linked population databases by which IVE against hospitalization and death in the elderly was first assessed. We explore IVE across six more recent influenza seasons, including periods before, during, and after peak activity to identify potential markers for bias.

Methods and Findings: Acute respiratory hospitalization and all-cause mortality were compared between immunized/non-immunized community-dwelling seniors ≥65 years through administrative databases in Manitoba, Canada between 2000-01 and 2005-06. IVE was compared during pre-season/influenza/post-season periods through logistic regression with multivariable adjustment (age/sex/income/residence/prior influenza or pneumococcal immunization/medical visits/comorbidity), stratification based on prior influenza immunization history, and propensity scores. Analysis during pre-season periods assessed baseline differences between immunized and unimmunized groups. The study population included ∼140,000 seniors, of whom 50-60% were immunized annually. Adjustment for key covariates and use of propensity scores consistently increased IVE. Estimates were paradoxically higher pre-season and for all-cause mortality vs. acute respiratory hospitalization. Stratified analysis showed that those twice consecutively and currently immunized were always at significantly lower hospitalization/mortality risk with odds ratios (OR) of 0.60 [95%CI0.48-0.75] and 0.58 [0.53-0.64] pre-season and 0.77 [0.69-0.86] and 0.71 [0.66-0.77] during influenza circulation, relative to the consistently unimmunized. Conversely, those forgoing immunization when twice previously immunized were always at significantly higher hospitalization/mortality risk with OR of 1.41 [1.14-1.73] and 2.45 [2.21-2.72] pre-season and 1.21 [1.03-1.43] and 1.78 [1.61-1.96] during influenza circulation.

Conclusions: The most pronounced IVE estimates were paradoxically observed pre-season, indicating bias tending to over-estimate vaccine protection. Change in immunization habit from that of the prior two years may be a marker for this bias in administrative data sets; however, no analytic technique explored could adjust for its influence. Improved methods to achieve valid interpretation of protection in the elderly are needed.

Keywords: influenza vaccine, administrative databases

Suggested Citation

Hottes, Travis and Skowronski, Danuta and Hiebert, Brett and Janjua, Naveed Z. and Roos, Leslie Leon and Van Caeseele, Paul and Law, Barbara and De Serres, Gaston, Influenza Vaccine Effectiveness in the Elderly Based on Administrative Databases: Change in Immunization Habit as a Marker for Bias (July 4, 2011). PLoS One, Vol. 6, No. 7, July 2011, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1979676

Travis Hottes (Contact Author)

affiliation not provided to SSRN ( email )

Danuta Skowronski

British Columbia Centre for Disease Control ( email )

Brett Hiebert

University of Manitoba - Manitoba Centre for Health Policy ( email )

University of Manitoba Bannatyne Campus
Winnipeg
Canada

Naveed Z. Janjua

Aga Khan University ( email )

Stadium Road, P.O. Box 3500
Karachi, Sindh 74800
Pakistan

Leslie Leon Roos

University of Manitoba - Manitoba Centre for Health Policy ( email )

University of Manitoba Bannatyne Campus
Winnipeg
Canada

Paul Van Caeseele

University of Manitoba - Max Rady College of Medicine ( email )

Winnipeg
Canada

Barbara Law

Public Health Agency of Canada ( email )

Canada

Gaston De Serres

Université Laval - Faculty of Medicine ( email )

2214 Pavillon J-A. DeSeve
Quebec G1K 7P4
Canada

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