Journal article
Seroepidemiology: an underused tool for designing and monitoring vaccination programmes in low- and middleincome countries
Seroepidemiology, the use of data on the prevalence of bio-markers of infection or vaccination, is a potentially powerful tool to understand the epidemiology of infection before vaccination and to monitor the effectiveness of vaccination programmes. Global and national burden of disease estimates for hepatitis B and rubella are based almost exclusively on serological data. Seroepidemiology has helped in the design of measles, poliomyelitis and rubella elimination programmes, by informing estimates of the required population immunity thresholds for elimination. It contributes to monitoring of these programmes by identifying population immunity gaps and evaluating the effectiveness of vaccination campaigns. Seroepidemiological data have also helped to identify contributing factors to resurgences of diphtheria, Haemophilus Influenzae type B and pertussis. When there is no confounding by antibodies induced by natural infection (as is the case for tetanus and hepatitis B vaccines), seroprevalence data provide a composite picture of vaccination coverage and effectiveness, although they cannot reliably indicate the number of doses of vaccine received. Despite these potential uses, technological, time and cost constraints have limited the widespread application of this tool in low-income countries. The use of venous blood samples makes it difficult to obtain high participation rates in surveys, but the performance of assays based on less invasive samples such as dried blood spots or oral fluid has varied greatly. Waning antibody levels after vaccination may mean that seroprevalence underestimates immunity. This, together with variation in assay sensitivity and specificity and the common need to take account of antibody induced by natural infection, means that relatively sophisticated statistical analysis of data is required. Nonetheless, advances in assays on minimally invasive samples may enhance the feasibility of including serology in large survey programmes in low-income countries. In this paper, we review the potential uses of seroepidemiology to improve vaccination policymaking and programme monitoring and discuss what is needed to broaden the use of this tool in low- and middle-income countries.
Authors
Languages
- English
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Journal
Tropical Medicine & International Health
Volume
no 9 pp 1086–1098 september 2016
Type
Journal article
Categories
- Data
Topic references
COV-METH-PUB
Title | Author | Year | Type | Language |
---|---|---|---|---|
A computer simulation of the EPI survey strategy. | Alexandre G. Tserkovnyi, Jacobus Keja, James Leonard Tulloch, John E. Dowd, Stanley Lemeshow, Steven K. Lwanga | Journal article | English | |
A not quite as quick but much cleaner alternative to the Expanded Programme on Immunization (EPI) Cluster Survey design. | Anthony G. Turner , Muhammad Shuaib, Robert J. Magnani | Journal article | English | |
Assessing and monitoring vaccination coverage levels: lessons from the Americas. | Edgar Monterroso, Elizabeth R Zell, George Stroh, Gina Tambini, Héctor Izurieta, Linda Venczel, Vance Dietz | 2004 | Journal article | English |
Assessing equivalence: an alternative to the use of difference tests for measuring disparities in vaccination coverage. | Elizabeth T. Luman, Lawrence E. Barker, Mary M. McCauley, Susan Y Chu | 2002 | Journal article | English |
Choosing a Cluster Sampling Design for Lot Quality Assurance Sampling Surveys | Edward J. Bedrick, Lauren Hund, Marcello Pagano | Journal article | English | |
Cluster Lot Quality Assurance Sampling: Effect of Increasing the Number of Clusters on Classification Precision and Operational Feasibility | Roland W. Sutter, Steven G. F. Wassilak, Pascal Mkanda, Marina Takane, Alex N. Gasasira, Michael M. Nzioki, Alexandra E. Brown, Hiromasa Okayasu | Journal article | English | |
Comments on ‘‘Monitoring vaccination coverage: Defining the role of surveys” | Robert Pond, Sandra Mounier-Jack | Journal article | English | |
Consultancy services for conducting an evaluation of immunisation coverage monitoring methodology and process | Wolfgang Weber, Xavier Bosch-Capblanch | Guidance | English | |
Does adjusting for recall in trend analysis affect coverage estimates for maternal and child health indicators? An analysis of DHS and MICS survey data | Donela Besada, Nicholas P. Oliphant, Nobubelo K. Ngandu, Samuel Manda, Sarah Rohde, Tanya Doherty | Journal article | English | |
Effectiveness of Using Mobile Phone Image Capture for Collecting Secondary Data: A Case Study on Immunization History Data Among Children in Remote Areas of Thailand | Amnat Khamsiriwatchara, Jaranit Kaewkungwal, Kasemsak Jandee, Peerawat Wansatid, Saranath Lawpoolsri, Waranya Wongwit | 2015 | Journal article | English |
Evaluating Confidence Interval Methods for Binomial Proportions in Clustered Surveys | Natalie Dean, Marcello Pagano | 2015 | Journal article | English |
Immunization Coverage Surveys and Linked Biomarker Serosurveys in Three Regions in Ethiopia | Jaya Goswami, Amha Kebede, Berhane Beyene, Inna Ruslanova, James D Campbell, Jenny Sequeira, Lisa Oot, Marcela F. Pasetti, Mardi Reymann, Mark A Travassos, Myron M Levine, Nigisti Mulholland, Robert Steinglass, Samba O Sow, Seydou S Diarra, Tassew Kassa, William C. Blackwelder, Yukun Wu, Zenaw Adam | Journal article | English | |
Issues and considerations in the use of serologic biomarkers for classifying vaccination history in household surveys | Adam MacNeil, Chung-won Lee, Vance Dietz | 1960 | Journal article | English |
Lot Quality Assurance Sampling to Monitor Supplemental Immunization Activity Quality: An Essential Tool for Improving Performance in Polio Endemic Countries | Alexandra E. Brown, Arshad Quddus, George Walker, Guillaume Chabot-Couture, Hiromasa Okayasu, Michael M. Nzioki, Mufti Z. Wadood, Roland W. Sutter | Journal article | English | |
LQAS: User Beware | Dale A. Rhoda, David J. Fitch, Soledad A. Fernandez, Stanley Lemeshow | Journal article | English | |
Measurement of immunisation coverage | Jean-Marie Okwo-Bele, Maryanne Neil, Peter Salama, Tessa Wardlaw, Tony Burton | Journal article | English | |
Measuring Coverage in MNCH: A Validation Study Linking Population Survey Derived Coverage to Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health Care Records in Rural China | Biqin Tan, Harry Campbell, Jennifer Bryce, Li Liu, Li Yang, Lirong Ju, Mengying Li, Neff Walker, Robert E. Black, Yan Guo | 2013 | Journal article | English |
Measuring coverage in MNCH: total survey error and the interpretation of intervention coverage estimates from household surveys. | Aluisio J D Barros, Dale A. Rhoda, Felicity T Cutts, Fred Arnold, Joseph Keating, Ruilin Ren, Thomas P. Eisele | Journal article | English | |
Measuring Coverage in MNCH: Tracking Progress in Health for Women and Children Using DHS and MICS Household Surveys | Attila Hancioglu, Fred Arnold | Journal article | English | |
Measuring populations to improve vaccination coverage | Ali Djibo, Andrew J. Tatem, Bryan T. Grenfell, Matthew J. Ferrari, Nita Bharti | 2016 | Journal article | English |
Measuring the performance of vaccination programs using cross-sectional surveys: a likelihood framework and retrospective analysis. | Bryan T. Grenfell, C. Jessica E. Metcalf, Derek A. T. Cummings, Francisco J. Luquero, Justin Lessler, Rebecca F. Grais | Journal article | English | |
Monitoring vaccination coverage: Defining the role of surveys | Dale A. Rhoda, Felicity T Cutts, M. Carolina Danovaro-Holliday, Pierre Claquin | Journal article | English | |
Reply to comments on Monitoring vaccination coverage: Defining the role of surveys. | Dale A. Rhoda, Felicity T Cutts, M. Carolina Danovaro-Holliday, Pierre Claquin | Journal article | English | |
Seroepidemiology: an underused tool for designing and monitoring vaccination programmes in low- and middleincome countries | Felicity T Cutts, Matt Hanson | Journal article | English | |
Use and abuse of rapid monitoring to assess coverage during mass vaccination campaigns. | Elizabeth T. Luman, K. Lisa Cairns, Robert Perry, Vance Dietz | Guidance | English | |
Validity of reported vaccination coverage in 45 countries. | Christopher J. L. Murray, Bakhuti Shengelia, Neeru Gupta, Saba Moussavi, Ajay Tandon, Michel Thieren | 2003 | Journal article | English |
Validity of vaccination cards and parental recall to estimate vaccination coverage: a systematic review of the literature. | Elizabeth T. Luman, Elizabeth Zell, Melody Miles, Tove K. Ryman, Vance Dietz | Journal article | English |