Abstract

BackgroundSince 2008 New Zealand has used three different formulations of pneumococcal vaccines on the national infant schedule, PCV7, PCV10 and PCV13, switching between PCV10 and PCV13 twice in 10 years. We have used New Zealand’s linkable, administrative health data to examine the comparative risk of otitis media (OM) and pneumonia hospitalisations among children receiving three different pneumococcal conjugate vaccines (PCV). MethodsThis was a retrospective cohort study using linked administrative data. Outcomes were otitis media, all cause pneumonia and bacterial pneumonia related hospitalisation for children in three cohorts representing periods where PCVs transitioned between PCV7, PCV10, PCV13 and back to PCV10 between 2011 and 2017. Cox’s proportional hazard regression was used to provide hazard ratio estimates to compare outcomes for children vaccinated with different vaccine formulations and to adjust for different sub population characteristics. ResultsEach observation period, where different vaccine formulations coincided, and therefore comparable with respect to age and the environment, included over fifty-thousand infants and children. PCV10 was associated with a reduced risk for OM compared with PCV7 (Adjusted HR 0.89, 95 %CI 0.82–0.97). There were no significant differences between PCV10 and PCV13 in risk of hospitalisation with either otitis media or all-cause pneumonia amongst the transition 2 cohort. In the 18 -month follow-up, after transition 3, PCV13 was associated with a marginally higher risk of all-cause pneumonia and otitis media compared to PCV10. ConclusionThese results should offer reassurance about the equivalence of these pneumococcal vaccines against the broader pneumococcal disease outcomes OM and pneumonia.

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