医学
接种疫苗
观察研究
荟萃分析
随机对照试验
系统回顾
肺炎
人口
队列研究
重症监护医学
梅德林
内科学
环境卫生
免疫学
政治学
法学
作者
Jacopo Demurtas,Stefano Celotto,Charlotte Beaudart,Dolores Sánchez‐Rodríguez,Cafer Balcı,Pınar Soysal,Marco Solmi,D Celotto,Elena Righi,Lee Smith,Pier Luigi Lopalco,Vania Noventa,Jean Pierre Michel,Gabriel Torbahn,Francesco Di Gennaro,Damiano Pizzol,Nicola Veronese,Stefania Maggi
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.arr.2020.101118
摘要
Vaccination is the main public health intervention to prevent influenza. We aimed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of influenza vaccination including systematic reviews and meta-analyses of observational studies and randomized controlled trials (RCTs). Peer-reviewed systematic reviews with meta-analyses of prospective studies that investigated the association of influenza vaccination with any health-related outcome, as well as RCTs that investigated the efficacy and safety of influenza vaccination, were included. Among 1240 references, 6 meta-analyses were included. In cohort studies of community-dwelling older people influenza vaccination was associated with a lower risk of hospitalization for heart disease and for influenza/pneumonia (strength of evidence: convincing). Evidence in lowering the risk of mortality in community-dwelling older people, of all deaths/severe respiratory diseases in high risk community-dwelling older people and of hospitalization for influenza/pneumonia in case-control studies, was highly suggestive. In RCTs, influenza vaccination, compared to placebo/no intervention, was associated to higher risk of local tenderness/sore arm and to a reduced risk of influenza like-illness. Both these associations showed moderate evidence using the GRADE (Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation). In conclusion, influenza vaccination in older people seems safe and effective. Further, the evidence on safety and efficacy of vaccines in this population might benefit by an extension of the follow-up period both in RCTs and in longitudinal studies, beyond the usual 6-month period, in order to be able to evaluate the impact of vaccination on long term outcomes.
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