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Interim 2019/20 influenza vaccine effectiveness: six European studies( Sep 2019 - Janu 2020).

Rose, A., Kissling, E., Emborg, H.D., Larrauri, A., McMenamin, J., Pozo, F., Trebbien, R., Mazagatos, C., Whitaker, H., Valenciano, M., Hooiveld, M. Interim 2019/20 influenza vaccine effectiveness: six European studies( Sep 2019 - Janu 2020). Eurosurveillance: 2020, 25(10)
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Background
Influenza A(H1N1)pdm09, A(H3N2) and B viruses were co-circulating in Europe between September 2019 and January 2020.

Aim
To provide interim 2019/20 influenza vaccine effectiveness (VE) estimates from six European studies, covering 10 countries and both primary care and hospital settings.

Methods
All studies used the test-negative design, although there were some differences in other study characteristics, e.g. patient selection, data sources, case definitions and included age groups. Overall and influenza (sub)type-specific VE was estimated for each study using logistic regression adjusted for potential confounders.

Results
There were 31,537 patients recruited across the six studies, of which 5,300 (17%) were cases with 5,310 infections. Most of these (4,466; 84%) were influenza A. The VE point estimates for all ages were 29% to 61% against any influenza in the primary care setting and 35% to 60% in hospitalised older adults (aged 65 years and over). The VE point estimates against A(H1N1)pdm09 (all ages, both settings) was 48% to 75%, and against A(H3N2) ranged from −58% to 57% (primary care) and −16% to 60% (hospital). Against influenza B, VE for all ages was 62% to 83% (primary care only).

Conclusions
Influenza vaccination is of continued benefit during the ongoing 2019/20 influenza season. Robust end-of-season VE estimates and genetic virus characterisation results may help understand the variability in influenza (sub)type-specific results across studies.
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