Epidemiological and virological characteristics of influenza B: results of the Global Influenza B Study

Saverio Caini(Netherlands Institute for Health Services Research), Q. Sue Huang(New Zealand Institute for Public Health and Forensic Science), Meral A. Cıblak(Istanbul University), Gabriela Kusznierz(Instituto Nacional de Enfermedades Respiratorias), Rhonda Owen(Department of Health and Aged Care), Sonam Wangchuk(Royal Centre for Disease Control), Cláudio Maierovitch Pessanha Henriques(Ministério da Saúde), Richard Njouom(Centre Pasteur du Cameroun), Rodrigo Fasce(Instituto de Salud Pública de Chile), Hongjie Yu(Chinese Center For Disease Control and Prevention), Shuo Feng(Chinese Center For Disease Control and Prevention), Maria Zambon(Public Health England), Alexey Clara(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Herman Kosasih(Naval Medical Research Command), Simona Puzelli, Hervé Kadjo(Institut Pasteur de Côte d'Ivoire), Gideon O. Emukule(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Jean‐Michel Héraud(Institut Pasteur de Madagascar), Li Wei Ang(Ministry of Health), Marietjie Venter(Institute for Global Dialogue), Alla Mironenko(L.V. Gromashevsky Institute of Epidemiology and Infectious Diseases of the National Academy of Medical Sciences of Ukraine), Lynnette Brammer(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Le Thi Quynh Mai(National Institute Of Hygiene And Epidemiology), François Schellevis(Netherlands Institute for Health Services Research), Stanley A. Plotkin(University of Pennsylvania), John Paget(Netherlands Institute for Health Services Research), the Global Influenza B Study
Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses
August 1, 2015
Cited by 203Open Access
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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 influenza-like 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.


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