Abstract
Vaccine effectiveness studies are subject to biases due to depletion-of-persons at risk of infection, or at especially high risk of infection, at different rates from different groups (depletion-of-susceptibles bias), a problem that can also lead to biased estimates of waning effectiveness, including spurious inference of waning when none exists. An alternative study design to identify waning is to study only vaccinated persons, and compare for each day the incidence in persons with earlier or later dates of vaccination to assess waning in vaccine protection as a function of vaccination time (namely whether earlier vaccination would result in lower subsequent protection compared to later vaccination). Prior studies suggested under what conditions this alternative would yield correct estimates of waning. Here we define the depletion-of-susceptibles process formally and show mathematically that for influenza vaccine waning studies, a randomised trial or corresponding observational study that compares incidence at a specific calendar time among individuals vaccinated at different times before the influenza season begins will not be vulnerable to depletion-of-susceptibles bias in its inference of waning as a function of vaccination time under the null hypothesis that none exists, and will - if waning does actually occur - underestimate the extent of waning. Such a design is thus robust in the sense that a finding of waning in that inference framework reflects actual waning of vaccine-induced immunity. We recommend such a design for future studies of waning, whether observational or randomised.
Highlights
Recent studies on influenza vaccine effectiveness (VE) have suggested that effectiveness declines over the course of one season [1,2,3]
We note that waning in the latter study design, and the analysis of this paper as a whole, is related to the question whether later vaccination is more protective at any moment when a person might be exposed to influenza than earlier vaccination, due to declining effectiveness of the immune response as time passes post-vaccine; we do not consider here a different potential source of waning, which is antigenic change of circulating influenza strains during the course of a season, making a particular immunised person less protected as a new variant becomes more common
We show that if vaccination of some individuals occurs after influenza season begins, and there is no waning, the study will erroneously infer waning has occurred as a result of unobserved differential depletionof-susceptibles between early- and late-vaccinated participants
Summary
Recent studies on influenza vaccine effectiveness (VE) have suggested that effectiveness declines over the course of one season [1,2,3]. We show that if vaccination of some individuals occurs after influenza season begins, and there is no waning, the study will erroneously infer waning has occurred as a result of unobserved differential depletionof-susceptibles between early- and late-vaccinated participants.
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