4.5 Article

Public health and economic impact of seasonal influenza vaccination with quadrivalent influenza vaccines compared to trivalent influenza vaccines in Europe

Journal

HUMAN VACCINES & IMMUNOTHERAPEUTICS
Volume 12, Issue 9, Pages 2259-2268

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/21645515.2016.1180490

Keywords

epidemiology; Europe; immunization programs; influenza vaccines; public health

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Influenza B strains represent on average 23% of all circulating strains in Europe and when there is a vaccine mismatch on B strains, additional influenza-related hospitalizations and deaths as well as substantial additional costs are observed. The objective was to estimate the public health and economic impact of seasonal influenza vaccination with quadrivalent influenza vaccines (QIV) compared to trivalent influenza vaccines (TIV) in Europe (EU).Based on data from 5 EU countries (France, Germany, Italy, Spain and UK) during 10 influenza seasons from 2002 to 2013, epidemiological and associated economic outcomes were estimated for each season for the actual scenario where the TIV was used, and for a hypothetical scenario where QIV could have been used instead.By using QIV, this study estimated that for the 5 EU countries, an additional 1.03million (327.9/100,000 inhabitants) influenza cases, 453,000 (143.9/100,000) general practitioners consultations, 672,000 (213.1/100,000) workdays lost, 24,000 (7.7/100,000) hospitalizations and 10,000 (3.1/100,000) deaths could have been avoided compared to the use of TIV over the 10-seasons-period. This study estimates that QIV can be of economic value since from a societal perspective 15million Euros would have been saved on general practitioners consultations (14million Euros from third-party payer perspective), 77million on hospitalizations (74million Euros from third-party payer perspective) and 150million Euros on workdays lost, across the 5 EU countries.In conclusion, the present study estimates that, compared to TIV, QIV may result in a substantial decrease in epidemiological burden and in influenza-related costs.

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