Epidemiological and virological characteristics of influenza B : results of the Global Influenza B Study
Loading...
Date
Authors
Caini, Saverio
Huang, Q. Sue
Ciblak, Meral A.
Kusznierz, Gabriela
Owen, Rhonda
Wangchuk, Sonam
Henriques, Claudio Maierovitch Pessanha
Njouom, Richard
Fasce, Rodrigo A.
Yu, Hongjie
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wiley
Abstract
INTRODUCTION Literature on influenza focuses on influenza A,
despite influenza B having a large public health impact. The
Global Influenza B Study aims to collect information on global
epidemiology and burden of disease of influenza B since 2000.
METHODS Twenty-six countries in the Southern (n = 5) and
Northern (n = 7) hemispheres and intertropical belt (n = 14)
provided virological and epidemiological data. We calculated the
proportion of influenza cases due to type B and Victoria and
Yamagata lineages in each country and season; tested the correlation
between proportion of influenza B and maximum weekly influenzalike
illness (ILI) rate during the same season; determined the
frequency of vaccine mismatches; and described the age distribution
of cases by virus type.
RESULTS The database included 935 673 influenza cases (2000–
2013). Overall median proportion of influenza B was 22 6%, with no statistically significant differences across seasons. During seasons
where influenza B was dominant or co-circulated (>20% of total
detections), Victoria and Yamagata lineages predominated during
64% and 36% of seasons, respectively, and a vaccine mismatch was
observed in 25% of seasons. Proportion of influenza B was inversely
correlated with maximum ILI rate in the same season in the Northern
and (with borderline significance) Southern hemispheres. Patients
infected with influenza B were usually younger (5–17 years) than
patients infected with influenza A.
CONCLUSION Influenza B is a common disease with some
epidemiological differences from influenza A. This should be
considered when optimizing control/prevention strategies in different
regions and reducing the global burden of disease due to influenza.
Description
Keywords
Burden of disease, Epidemiology, Global Influenza B Study (GIBS), Influenza, Vaccination, Vaccine mismatch
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Caini, S, Huang, QS, Ciblak, MA, Kusznierz, G, Owen, R et al. 2015, 'Epidemiological and virological characteristics of influenza B: results of the Global Influenza B Study', Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses, vol. 9, suppl. 1, pp. 3–12.