为应对日本和菲律宾的COVID-19大流行开展COVID-19疫苗有效性研究的经验:对未来流行病和潜在流行病的教训

IF 1 Q4 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response Pub Date : 2025-06-04 eCollection Date: 2025-04-01 DOI:10.5365/wpsar.2025.16.2.1157
Takeshi Arashiro, Regina Pascua Berba, Joy Potenciano Calayo, Rontgene Solante, Shuichi Suzuki, Jinho Shin, Motoi Suzuki, Martin Hibberd, Koya Ariyoshi, Chris Smith
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引用次数: 0

摘要

问题:一旦COVID-19疫苗推出,就需要监测真实世界的疫苗有效性,以积累证据,为政策和风险沟通提供信息。考虑到影响疫苗信心的历史问题,日本和菲律宾尤其如此。背景:这两个国家都没有可以加强以评估疫苗有效性的公共卫生监测,也没有现成的国家疫苗接种数据库。行动:在每个国家的多个保健设施中设立了研究小组,以评估疫苗对有症状感染和严重疾病的有效性。结果:在日本,多份研究报告以日文发表在国家传染病研究所的网站上,并提交给国家政府咨询委员会。全国范围的媒体报道促进了透明度,并增强了政府和公众对疫苗接种规划的信心。在菲律宾,这项研究的启动被推迟,以便使研究计划与各利益攸关方的利益保持一致,并获得机构审查委员会的批准。最终,这些研究成功地开始并完成。讨论:开展我们的研究有四个主要挑战:寻找收集数据的保健设施;获取接触(疫苗接种)数据;确定流行病学偏差和混杂因素;并及时告知政策和风险沟通。在紧急情况/流行病/大流行期间做好准备,迅速评估疫苗接种等相关干预措施至关重要,并应包括以下考虑因素:(1)建立和维持前瞻性数据收集平台,最好是在公共卫生监督下(如果没有,则是临床研究网络或关联数据库);(2)考虑偏差和混杂因素的统一和实用的协议;(3)与包括机构审查委员会在内的利益相关者沟通。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Experience conducting COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness studies in response to the COVID-19 pandemic in Japan and the Philippines: lessons for future epidemics and potential pandemics.

Problem: Once COVID-19 vaccines were rolled out, there was a need to monitor real-world vaccine effectiveness to accumulate evidence to inform policy and risk communication. This was especially true in Japan and the Philippines, given historical issues that affected vaccine confidence.

Context: Neither country had public health surveillance that could be enhanced to evaluate vaccine effectiveness or readily available national vaccination databases.

Action: Study groups were established in multiple health-care facilities in each country to assess vaccine effectiveness against both symptomatic infection and severe disease.

Outcome: In Japan, multiple study reports were published in Japanese on the web site of the National Institute of Infectious Diseases and presented at the national government's advisory board. Nationwide media coverage facilitated transparency and increased the confidence of the government and the public in the vaccination programme. In the Philippines, the launch of the study was delayed so as to align the research plan with the interests of various stakeholders and to obtain institutional review board approval. Ultimately, the studies were successfully initiated and completed.

Discussion: There were four main challenges in conducting our studies: finding health-care facilities for data collection; obtaining exposure (vaccination) data; identifying epidemiological biases and confounders; and informing policy and risk communication in a timely manner. Preparedness during inter-emergency/epidemic/pandemic periods to rapidly evaluate relevant interventions such as vaccination is critical and should include the following considerations: (1) the establishment and maintenance of prospective data collection platforms, ideally under public health surveillance (if not, clinical research networks or linked databases); (2) uniform and practical protocols considering biases and confounders; and (3) communication with stakeholders including institutional review boards.

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来源期刊
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
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