Abstract

Introduction: Health authorities use different systems of influenza surveillance. Sentinel networks, which are recommended by the World Health Organization, provide information on weekly influenza incidence in a monitored population, based on laboratory-confirmed cases. In Catalonia there is a public website, DiagnostiCat, that publishes the number of weekly clinical diagnoses at the end of each week of disease registration, while the sentinel network publishes its reports later. The objective of this study was to determine whether there is concordance between the number of cases of clinical diagnoses and the number of confirmed cases of influenza, in order to evaluate the predictive potential of a clinical diagnosis-based system. Methods: Population-based ecological time series study in Catalonia. The period runs from the 2010–2011 to the 2018–2019 season. The concordance between the clinical diagnostic cases and the confirmed cases was evaluated. The degree of agreement and the concordance were analysed using Bland–Altman graphs and intraclass correlation coefficients. Results: There was greater concordance between the clinical diagnoses and the sum of the cases confirmed outside and within the sentinel network than between the diagnoses and the confirmed sentinel cases. The degree of agreement was higher when influenza rates were low. Conclusions: There is concordance between the clinical diagnosis and the confirmed cases of influenza. Registered clinical diagnostic cases could provide a good alternative to traditional surveillance, based on case confirmation. Cases of clinical diagnosis of influenza may have the potential to predict the onset of annual influenza epidemics.

Highlights

  • Health authorities use different systems of influenza surveillance

  • We carried out a population-based ecological time series study, using the number of clinically diagnosed cases of influenza, cases of influenza confirmed by the network of sentinel physicians, and total confirmed cases of influenza in Catalonia

  • The overall concordance between the rates of clinical diagnoses, confirmed sentinel cases, and total confirmed influenza cases obtained for all the seasons is illustrated by the intraclass correlation coefficient of absolute agreement (ICCA) of 0.470 and the ICCC of 0.539

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Summary

Introduction

Sentinel networks, which are recommended by the World Health Organization, provide information on weekly influenza incidence in a monitored population, based on laboratory-confirmed cases. Influenza is an infectious disease caused by RNA viruses of the genera Alphainfluenzavirus and Betainfluenzavirus (family: Orthomyxoviridae) It is responsible for high morbidity and high mortality in risk groups every year during the cold season [1]. The minimum surveillance required by the World Health Organization (WHO) consists of collecting weekly data based on individual cases or cases aggregated at the country level, at least during the period of the epidemic. These data can be of suspected and/or laboratoryconfirmed cases [2]. The WHO facilitates the exchange of information and biological material between countries through the Global Influenza Surveillance and Response System program [3]

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