Measles Elimination in NZ. Dr Tom Kiedrzynski Principal Adviser, Communicable diseases, Ministry of Health

Similar documents
PERTUSSIS REPORT. November 2013

Quote. These are my principles. If you don t like them I have others. Groucho Marx

Invasive Pneumococcal Disease Quarterly Report

Invasive Pneumococcal Disease Quarterly Report

OF MEASLES ELIMINATION

MONTHLY NOTIFIABLE DISEASE SURVEILLANCE REPORT

MONTHLY NOTIFIABLE DISEASE SURVEILLANCE REPORT

Ministry of Health. Refresh of rheumatic fever prevention plans: Guiding information for high incidence District Health Boards June 2015

Community and Hospital Surveillance

MONTHLY NOTIFIABLE DISEASE SURVEILLANCE REPORT

Meeting Report SIXTH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE REGIONAL VERIFICATION COMMISSION FOR MEASLES ELIMINATION IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC

Framework for Verifying Elimination of Measles and Rubella SAGE Working Group on Measles and Rubella (Draft of 18 October 2012)

BSA New Zealand Hawkes Bay District Health Board Coverage Report

Under-immunisation in migrant communities: the measles outbreak in southwestern

The epidemiology of meningococcal disease in New Zealand 2010 SURVEILLANCE REPORT

MONTHLY NOTIFIABLE DISEASE SURVEILLANCE REPORT

MONTHLY NOTIFIABLE DISEASE SURVEILLANCE REPORT

Closing MR Immunity Gaps Experiences from the Regions Sri Lanka

Laboratory Surveillance of Chlamydia and Gonorrhoea in New Zealand. October to December 2010

World Health Organization, Western Pacific Regional Office, Manila, Philippines Issue 13 September 2007 ISSN

REGIONAL OFFICE FOR THE WESTERN PACIFIC BUREAU RÉGIONAL DU PACIFIQUE OCCIDENTAL MEASLES ELIMINATION

An aggressive approach for measles outbreak among adolescents in Barranquilla, Colombia, 2011

Immunisation Subcommittee of PTAC Meeting held 23 April (minutes for web publishing)

WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION Regional Office for the Western Pacific FIELD GUIDELINES FOR MEASLES ELIMINATION

Total population 20,675,000. Live births (LB) 349,715. Children <1 year 346,253. Children <5 years 1,778,050. Children <15 years 5,210,100

Diabetic Retinal Screening, Grading, Monitoring and Referral Guidance. Objective

Measles in Ireland, 2005

Targeting Immunisation

INVASIVE PNEUMOCOCCAL DISEASE IN NEW ZEALAND, 2015

Measles and rubella monitoring January 2015

Monitoring vaccine-preventable diseases is

How to present the European Vaccine Action Plan (EVAP)

BULLETIN. World Health Organization, Western Pacific Regional Office, Manila, Philippines Issue 8 January 2006 ISSN

Infectious Disease Surveillance in NZ. Michael Baker Department of Public Health, University of Otago, Wellington

Human Papillomavirus Immunisation Programme. Background

Suicide Facts. Deaths and intentional self-harm hospitalisations

keyword: hepatitis Hepatitis

Immunisation in New Zealand Strategic Directions

Kidney Transplant Activity New Zealand

Total population 1,265,308,000. Live births (LB) 27,016,000. Children <1 year 25,928,200. Children <5 years 23,818,000. Children <15 years 25,639,000

Progress Toward Rubella and Congenital Rubella Syndrome Elimination in the Western Hemisphere,

VII THE CHILDHOOD IMMUNISATION PROGRAMME IN SINGAPORE 7. 7

Kidney Transplant Activity New Zealand

Epidemiologic Characteristics of Recent Measles Outbreaks in ROK

Introduction to Measles a Priority Vaccine Preventable Disease (VPD) in Africa

Measles Elimination Dr. Suzanne Cotter 4 th National Immunisation Conference 2007

Every Opportunity in Partnership.. Child & Family Service working in Partnership to increase Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) coverage rates

Dr Alasdair Patrick. Dr Nagham Al-Mozany. 9:45-10:10 Where Are We Up To With Bowel Cancer Screening?

Revitalising the National HPV Immunisation Programme. with agreed outcomes from the August 2014 workshop

INVASIVE PNEUMOCOCCAL DISEASE IN NEW ZEALAND, Helen Heffernan. Julie Morgan. Rosemary Woodhouse. Diana Martin

Guidelines for the control of measles outbreaks in Australia

Mumps in the Community Dr. Isabel Oliver, A Webber Training Teleclass

Total population 1,212,110. Live births (LB) 43,924. Children <1 year 40,351. Children <5 years 192,340. Children <15 years 510,594

Total population 24,759,000. Live births (LB) 342,458. Children <1 year 337,950. Children <5 years 1,698,664. Children <15 years 5,233,093

Measles Containing Vaccines. UNICEF Supply Division Industry Consultation Meeting January 2012

Back to Basics: Regional Progress Towards Measles and Rubella Elimination and Introduction of New Vaccines WHO European Regional Office

New guidelines for the management of norovirus outbreaks in acute and community health and social care settings

Immunisation Subcommittee of PTAC Meeting held 28 October 2015

Mathematical Modelling of Infectious Diseases. Raina MacIntyre

NOTIFIABLE DISEASES IN NEW ZEALAND 2014

Impact and effectiveness of national immunisation programmes. David Green, Nurse Consultant, Immunisations Public Health England

ESR Epidemiological Skills Development Programme. Module 1.2 Effective Case Investigation Course. Course Outline. Toby Regan

GOAL 2: ACHIEVE RUBELLA AND CRS ELIMINATION. (indicator G2.2) Highlights

Measles and Rubella Global Update SAGE 19 October 2017

Immunisation Policy in the Netherlands

Cancer Control Indicators

Measles, Mumps, Rubella (MMR) Vaccine discussion pack. an information guide for health professionals and parents

National Hazardous Substances and Lead Notifications

Expanded Programme on Immunization (EPI)

Programmatic Feasibility of Measles Elimination

Immunisation Update for Occupational Health

This form is completed by the consenting parent and the lead maternity carer (LMC) after the birth immunisations.

NOTIFIABLE DISEASES IN NEW ZEALAND 2015

Judy Li Nick Chen The Quit Group

3. CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS

Lessons Learned and Best Practices of Achieving and Maintaining Measles and Rubella Elimination in the Americas

Influenza in New Zealand 2009

Reducing differences in the uptake of immunisation (PH21): Frequently asked questions for staff in Sure Start Children s Centres

The HPV Immunisation Programme in NZ. Chris Millar Senior Advisor Immunisation Ministry of Health

Performance of National Measles Case-Based Surveillance Systems in The WHO African Region

Universal Newborn Hearing Screening and Early Intervention Programme (UNHSEIP) Monitoring Report

Measles and Rubella Initiative Outbreak Response Fund Standard Operating Procedures, effective 01 April 2017

INVASIVE GROUP A STREPTOCOCCAL INFECTION IN NEW ZEALAND, 2014 AND 2015

EPIET REPORT. Background. Fellowship projects

Tobacco Trends 2007 A brief update on monitoring indicators

Maternal vaccination

OVERVIEW OF THE NATIONAL CHILDHOOD IMMUNISATION PROGRAMME IN SINGAPORE

Immunisation Subcommittee of PTAC Meeting held 10 February (minutes for web publishing)

Monthly measles and rubella monitoring report

MidCentral District Health Board Rheumatic Fever Prevention Plan. October 2013

Immunization and Vaccines

SITUATION REPORT YELLOW FEVER 16 JUNE 2016 SUMMARY

YELLOW FEVER UPDATE. DPGH Meeting Dr. Grace Saguti NPO/DPC 13 July 2016

Highlighting in the WHO European Region: Summary. No. 21(February 2012)

NSW Annual Vaccine-Preventable Disease Report, 2011

The schedule for childhood vaccination is:(web link to NHS Childhood Immunisation Schedule for 2008

INFLUENZA WEEKLY UPDATE

APPENDIX: NATIONAL SURVEILLANCE DATA AND TRENDS

Figure 1. Distribution of confirmed measles cases with rash onset 1 31 August 2014, WHO Western Pacific Region

Transcription:

Measles Elimination in NZ Dr Tom Kiedrzynski Principal Adviser, Communicable diseases, Ministry of Health

Presentation Outline International background WHO requirements Overview of the measles situation in NZ: Epidemiology, incl. genotyping Quality of surveillance and laboratory testing Immunisation coverage Summary of recent work measles risk analysis modelling of measles epidemics cost analysis of measles outbreaks and benefit-cost analysis of measles immunisation catch-up Conclusion What s next?

WHO requirements What does measles elimination mean? Absence of endemic measles virus transmission in a defined geographical area (e.g. region or country) for 12 months in the presence of a wellperforming surveillance system.

WHO requirements (2) Three criteria, supported by five lines of evidence for the verification of measles elimination Criteria Documentation of the interruption of endemic measles virus transmission for a period of at least 36 months from the last known endemic case; In the presence of verification-standard surveillance; and Genotyping evidence that supports the interruption of endemic transmission

WHO requirements (3) Lines of evidence 1. A detailed description of the epidemiology of measles since the introduction of measles vaccine in the NIP 2. Quality of epidemiological and laboratory surveillance systems 3. Population immunity presented as a birth cohort analysis with the additional of evidence related to any marginalized and migrant groups 4. Sustainability of the National Immunization Programme including resources for SIAs, where appropriate, in order to sustain elimination 5. Genotyping evidence that supports interruption of measles virus transmission

Epidemiology Overview of the measles situation in NZ

1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Number of notifications Rate per 100,000 population Number of measles notifications and rate per 100,000 population in NZ by year, 1997 2015 1 2000 Notifications Rate 60 1800 1600 50 1400 1200 1000 800 600 400 200 40 30 20 10 0 0 [ESR] Report year 1 The 2015 rate is annualised based on cases reported between 1 January and 30 June 2015

Weekly number of probable and confirmed cases, Auckland, 2011-2012 [ARPHS]

Re-establishment of endemic transmission: occurs when epidemiological evidence, supported wherever possible by laboratory evidence, indicates the presence of a chain of transmission of a virus strain that continues uninterrupted for 12 months in a defined geographical area (region or country) where measles was previously eliminated.

Number of notifications Number of measles notifications in NZ by public health service and surveillance week, December 2013 to June 2015 40 30 20 Auckland Regional Public Health Service Community and Public Health Hawke's Bay Public Health Unit MidCentral Public Health Service Northland Public Health Service Population Health Service Waikato Regional Public Health Tairawhiti DHB Taranaki Health Protection Unit Toi Te Ora - Public Health 10 0 2013 2014 2015 [ESR] Year (surveillance week)

<1 1 4 5 9 10 14 15 19 20 29 30 39 40 49 50 59 60 69 70+ <1 1 4 5 9 10 14 15 19 20 29 30 39 40 49 50 59 60 69 70+ Number of notifications Number and classification of measles notification in NZ by age group, 2014 and January June 2015 Laboratory-confirmed Epidemiologically-confirmed 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 [ESR] 2014 2015 Year (by age group in years)

Numbers and age of measles cases in years in NZ for two periods, 1997-2014 and 2007-2014 [Massey University]

Number of notifications Number of measles notifications by outbreak and month, NZ, December 2013 to June 2015 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Outbreak number 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 [ESR] 2013 2014 2015 Year (by month)

List of outbreaks by genotype, NZ, Jan 2013 to Jun 2015 Year Outbreak Genotype B3 (Philippines) B3 with 1 base pair difference from B3 (Philippines) D8 Unknown 2013 1 y 2 Y 1 2014 3 y 4 y 5 y 6 y 7 y 8 y 9 y 10 y 11 y 12 y 13 y 14 y 15 y 16 y 17 y 18 y 19 y 2 20 y 2015 21 y 22 y 1 Index case came from the Philippines. 2 Contact with case from previous outbreak (B3 with 1 base pair difference from B3 (Philippines)) Note: all the outbreaks listed are with local transmission. [ESR]

Quality of surveillance Overview of the measles situation in NZ

WHO indicators and targets for epidemiological surveillance quality of measles notifications in NZ, 2014 and 2015 Indicator Target 2014 2015 1 Proportion of surveillance units reporting measles data to 80% 100% 100% the national level on time Reporting rate of discarded non-measles non-rubella cases at the national level 2 per 100,000 population Proportion of 2 nd administrative level units reporting at 80% of 2 nd level 95% 2 85% 2 least 2 discarded non-measles non-rubella cases per administrative units 100,000 Proportion of suspected cases with adequate specimen 80% 96% 94% collection 3 Proportion of laboratory-confirmed chains of transmission 80% 85% 100% (defined as 2 or more confirmed measles cases) with specimens adequate for detecting measles virus collected and tested in an accredited laboratory 12.0 per 100,000 5.8 per 100,000 Proportion of all suspected measles cases that have had an adequate investigation initiated within 48 hours of notification 80% of suspected cases Data not available. Each notified case is considered to be under investigation until a further classification. All relevant clinical and demographic information on the suspected case is expected to be collected within one working day whenever possible. It is envisaged to have data on this indicator systematically collected in the future. [ESR] 1 2015 figures presented are annualised figures based on cases reported between 1 January and 30 June 2015. 2 See next Table for the cases and rates by district health board (2 nd level administrative unit). 3 This indicator has been calculated using the following data: proportion of all notified measles and rubella cases (including discarded cases) that were not epidemiologically-linked to a measles or rubella case and that were laboratory-tested.

Immunisation (MMR) coverage Overview of the measles situation in NZ

MMR coverage by birth cohort and dose (2006 to 2012) as on Aug 2014 Birth cohort 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Number of children 62,883 66,071 66,289 65,473 65,690 62,662 62,628 MMR 1 coverage 92.6% 93.2% 93.9% 94.5% 94.6% 94.6% 93.9% MMR 2 coverage 89.8% 89.5% 88.5% N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A: not available [MoH]

Number of DHBs by coverage band for MMR dose one (2006 to 2012 birth cohorts), NZ, Aug 2014 Coverage band (%) Birth cohort 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 85 89 1 2 1 2 1 1 2 90 94 13 11 10 6 6 7 8 95+ 6 7 9 12 13 12 10 Number of DHBs by coverage band for MMR dose two (2006 to 2008 birth cohorts), NZ, Aug 2014 [MoH] Coverage band (%) Birth cohort 2006 2007 2008 80 84 1 2 3 85 89 7 5 4 90 94 12 12 13 95+ 0 1 0

Measles Risk Analysis Modelling of measles epidemics Cost analysis of measles outbreaks and Benefit-cost analysis of measles immunisation catch-up Summary

Risk Analysis Summary (1) Risk of measles infection decreases significantly with age, though a peak of cases appears again in the 12-17 age class. Pacific people 0-2 year olds are statistically more at risk per capita of measles infection. There is statistical support for 2-24 year old Pacific people and 5-17 year old Asian children being less at risk than European and Maori of the same age. There is some statistical support for those living in better socio-economic situations being at greater risk of measles.

Risk Analysis Summary (2) The majority of vaccinated cases occur in those people which received single vaccinations around 1 year old. There is a continued, and perhaps increasing, risk of measles importation due to travel and endemic measles elsewhere in the world. There may be seasonal changes in risk of measles importation, with travel numbers peaking in December and lowest in May/June.

Vaccination coverage (2006-2013 years) and serosurvey estimates of immunity (< 2006 birth cohorts) among different age classes [MoH] Note Values are from NIR, VPD serosurvey 2005-2007, and estimates based on published information. Vaccine effectiveness used for 0-4 year olds was 96%, 5-13 year olds 99%, and for 14 year olds equivocal serological results were considered non-immune. 28% of those < 1 were considered immune due to passive immunity

NZ population by year of birth and estimated numbers of naive people in each age class using national immunity data (top) and the number of measles cases by year of birth from 2007-2014 (bottom)

Measles Epidemics Modelling Summary Regular importations of measles pose an ongoing threat to NZ s efforts to eliminate measles. The reproduction number for measles in the partially immune NZ population (Rv) is often close to and exceeding 1, suggesting increased population level immunity is required to ensure prevention of measles persistence following importation. The proportion of the currently naive population requiring additional and effective vaccination in NZ in order to push Rv below one ranges from 12% to 30% among DHBs, and is at least 24% at the national level (approximately 104,357 vaccinations).

Measles Epidemics Modelling Summary (2) After vaccination to ensure Rv is < 1 Measles introductions to New Zealand with a median outbreak size of 2 cases were predicted by simulation models Thus, typically individual cases would be expected on average to infect a single secondary cases. However, the mean outbreak size of 61 cases was predicted, because of larger outbreak sizes predicted among 1000 simulations following importation, despite Rv being one and the outbreak predicted to die out.

Measles Epidemics Modelling Summary (3) Thus, increased vaccination beyond the 24% of the currently 10% naive population required may be useful to prevent these rare but costly events. WHO advice is 95 % of the population immunised with MMR2.

Measles Outbreaks Cost Analysis Summary The cost of the first 187 measles cases in 2014 is estimated to be approximately $1,041,186 due to earnings lost for cases and contacts, case management and hospitalisation costs. The mean wage loss per measles case is estimated to be approximately $839. The mean cost of those measles cases that attend hospital is estimated to be $1,877 per attending case. Approximately 17% of measles cases attend hospital. The mean public health service cost per case is $1,765. The average number of contacts per case requiring quarantine was 2.11, requiring 7.3 days of quarantine on average, at a cost of $170 per day.

Measles Immunisation Catch-Up Benefit-Cost Analysis Summary The benefit-cost (B/C) ratio analyses suggest additional vaccination is beneficial financially (B/C >1), with vaccination-related costs required to exceed approximately $74 per person currently naive immunized through vaccination before the costs exceed the benefits for all DHBs together if the outbreaks continue with an average number of annual cases based on 2009-2014 figures. However, in a scenario without PH intervention, or with larger continuing outbreaks, vaccination-related costs are required to exceed approximately $3000 per person currently naive immunized through vaccination before exceeding the benefits. The B/C ratio differed across DHBs with those with large populations and more naive in absolute numbers most likely to benefit from immunisation campaigns.

Measles Immunisation Catch-Up Benefit-Cost Analysis Summary (3) This analysis doesn t take into account the benefits related to the rubella and mumps vaccine component of MMR

Conclusion Good news!! NZ will request the verification of measles elimination in 2015 2015 Report being written NVC yet to be organised Bad news... However, NZ is at risk of further significant measles outbreaks and of reestablishment of endemic transmission Huge improvements in coverage since 2006 MMR2 immunisation coverage is still significantly under 95% Older population groups are less immunised Overall population immunity is likely around 90% only Outbreaks since 2009 All recent significant outbreaks affected school-age children Schools also offer a particularly good environment for measles transmission. Risk for non-immunised students: disease and restriction (exclusion) As part of the WPRO RCM, NZ has agreed to eliminate measles SIA are expected to be part of the sustainability of the programme Benefit-cost of MMR immunisation catch up for measles is clear

What s next? What is required? A catch-up campaign or SIA Further coverage improvements is specific population groups and geographical areas Aim at 95% coverage by MMR2 Catch-up campaign Should reach about 50% of those non-immunised Proposed main target = school aged children born before the introduction of NIR, students, and young adults up to the age of 30 years without 2 MMR documented Plus possibly anybody else born after 1968 without 2 MMR documented All DHBs, starting with Auckland region and the other big PH regions MoH to share current information and communicate with PHOs, DHBs and PHUs Key questions How to identify those not immune? Evaluation? Funding?

Acknowledgements Environmental Science and Research Institute (ESR) Surveillance information Massey University Additional risk analysis, modelling, cost and benefit/cost analysis MoH - MMR Coverage information Auckland Regional Public Health Service (ARPHS) additional surveillance information National Measles Reference Laboratory - genotyping