Epidemiological and virological characteristics of influenza B: results of the Global Influenza B Study
Publication year
2015Author(s)
Source
Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses, 9 Suppl 1, (2015), pp. 3-12ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
Primary and Community Care
Journal title
Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses
Volume
vol. 9 Suppl 1
Page start
p. 3
Page end
p. 12
Subject
Radboudumc 0: Other Research RIHS: Radboud Institute for Health SciencesAbstract
INTRODUCTION: Literature on influenza focuses on influenza A, despite influenza B having a large public health impact. The Global Influenza B Study aims to collect information on global epidemiology and burden of disease of influenza B since 2000. METHODS: Twenty-six countries in the Southern (n = 5) and Northern (n = 7) hemispheres and intertropical belt (n = 14) provided virological and epidemiological data. We calculated the proportion of influenza cases due to type B and Victoria and Yamagata lineages in each country and season; tested the correlation between proportion of influenza B and maximum weekly influenza-like illness (ILI) rate during the same season; determined the frequency of vaccine mismatches; and described the age distribution of cases by virus type. RESULTS: The database included 935 673 influenza cases (2000-2013). Overall median proportion of influenza B was 22.6%, with no statistically significant differences across seasons. During seasons where influenza B was dominant or co-circulated (>20% of total detections), Victoria and Yamagata lineages predominated during 64% and 36% of seasons, respectively, and a vaccine mismatch was observed in approximately 25% of seasons. Proportion of influenza B was inversely correlated with maximum ILI rate in the same season in the Northern and (with borderline significance) Southern hemispheres. Patients infected with influenza B were usually younger (5-17 years) than patients infected with influenza A. CONCLUSION: Influenza B is a common disease with some epidemiological differences from influenza A. This should be considered when optimizing control/prevention strategies in different regions and reducing the global burden of disease due to influenza.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [202802]
- Electronic publications [100870]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [80020]
- Open Access publications [69592]
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