Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-2pzkn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-04T12:42:54.461Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Effectiveness of vaccinating household contacts in addition to chemoprophylaxis after a case of meningococcal disease: a systematic review

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 June 2008

M. R. HOEK*
Affiliation:
EPIET-ECDC, Stockholm, Sweden Health Protection Agency South West, Gloucestershire, UK
H. CHRISTENSEN
Affiliation:
Health Protection Agency South West, Gloucestershire, UK
W. HELLENBRAND
Affiliation:
Robert Koch Institute, RKI, Berlin, Germany
P. STEFANOFF
Affiliation:
National Institute of Public Health–National Institute of Hygiene, Warsaw, Poland
M. HOWITZ
Affiliation:
Statens Serum Institut, Copenhagen, Denmark
J. M. STUART
Affiliation:
Health Protection Agency South West, Gloucestershire, UK
*
*Author for correspondence: Dr M. R. Hoek, Health Protection Agency, The Wheelhouse, Bond's Mill, Stonehouse, Glos GL10 3RF, UK. (Email: Hoekmr@gmail.com)
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Summary

We performed a systematic review to estimate the effectiveness of vaccination, in addition to chemoprophylaxis, in preventing meningococcal disease among household contacts. Medline, EMBASE, EMGM, and EUIBIS were used for data collection. Studies reporting on at least 100 primary cases and on subsequent cases in household settings with follow-up of more than 2 weeks after onset of disease in the primary case were reviewed. A meta-analysis was used to calculate the average attack rate in household contacts given chemoprophylaxis 14–365 days after onset of disease in the primary case. In total, 652 studies were identified, five studies and one unpublished report met the inclusion criteria. The weighted average attack rate was 1·1/1000 household contacts (95% CI 0·7–1·7). This review supports vaccination of household contacts in addition to chemoprophylaxis to reduce the risk of meningococcal disease among household contacts of a case caused by a vaccine-preventable serogroup.

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © 2008 Cambridge University Press

INTRODUCTION

Meningococcal disease is a severe illness with high case fatality (5–10%) and frequent sequelae (10–20%) that require lifelong medical attention [Reference Ramsay, Fox and Chandra1Reference Wang3]. Long-term complications include headaches, skin scarring, limb amputation, deafness and learning difficulties. One well-defined risk factor for developing meningococcal disease is being a close contact of a primary case [Reference De Wals4, Reference Munford5]. Treatment with rifampicin, ceftriaxone, or ciprofloxacin is effective in the eradication of meningococcal carriage and reduces the number of subsequent cases in a household setting [Reference Purcell6, Reference Fraser7]. However, subsequent cases still occur, and it has been suggested that chemoprophylaxis merely postpones the onset of disease in household members [Reference Stuart8]. Some countries also recommend chemoprophylaxis for the primary case before discharge from hospital. Even so, eradication of carriage within households using chemoprophylaxis cannot be expected to eliminate the short-term risk of meningococcal disease among household members. Appropriate immunization of close contacts could add medium and longer term protection.

Two types of vaccines are currently licensed in Europe; polysaccharide vaccines against serogroups A, C, W135 and Y and newer protein-polysaccharide conjugate vaccines against serogroup C. A survey in 2007 found that 14 European countries recommended vaccination of household contacts in addition to chemoprophylaxis, and seven did not [Reference Hoek9]. The lack of evidence for effectiveness of strategies used in public health management of meningococcal disease is a well-recognized obstacle in the development of coherent policies and is reflected in the variations in approach [Reference Begg10]. We systematically reviewed the risk of subsequent cases among household contacts who had already received effective chemoprophylaxis (rifampicin, ciprofloxacin, ceftriaxone) after diagnosis of meningococcal disease in the primary case.

METHODS

Systematic literature review

We identified studies by searching Medline (1 January 1966 to 31 March 2006) and EMBASE (1 January 1974 to 31 March 2006) and by examining the references of the papers that met the inclusion criteria. We used the following search terms: Neisseria meningitidis or meningococcal disease and subsequent cases or associated cases or household contacts or chemoprophylaxis or subsequent attack rate or secondary attack rate or close contacts. In addition, members of the European Monitoring Group for Meningococci (www.emgm.eu) and members of the European Union Invasive Bacterial Infection Surveillance network (www.euibis.org) were contacted and asked to inform us of any relevant published or unpublished data.

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Abstracts were reviewed by M.H., and initially selected on title and abstract alone. The remaining papers were reviewed by M.H. and J.S., and further selected based upon the full text. Studies reporting on at least 100 sporadic cases and on subsequent cases in household contacts after effective chemoprophylaxis with a follow-up period of more than 2 weeks after onset of disease in the index case were included in the meta-analysis. Effective chemoprophylaxis was taken to be a short course of rifampicin, or one dose of ceftriaxone or ciprofloxacin [Reference Fraser7]. Papers reporting specifically on outbreaks were excluded to avoid bias from unusually high attack rates.

Case definitions

A primary case was defined as the first case of invasive disease due to N. meningitidis in a household setting. A household contact was defined as any person living in the same house or sharing the same sleeping quarters as the primary case in the 10 days prior to the onset of disease in the index case. A subsequent case of potentially vaccine-preventable disease was defined as a case of N. meningitidis in a household contact 14–365 days after onset of disease in the primary case.

Assumptions

The minimum interval of 14 days was the sum of the period between onset of meningococcal disease in the primary case and vaccination of household contacts (estimate 7 days) and the period between vaccination and development of immunity (estimate 7 days). Where data on some variables was incomplete, e.g. size of households in primary cases, proportion of contacts given prophylaxis, we made an estimate based on data from similar settings in other studies. In one paper [Reference Cooke11] where only aggregated data on times of subsequent cases was available, we assumed an equal time distribution of subsequent cases within each given time period. Vaccine efficacy of 85–95% and case fatality of 5–10% were used in the meta-analysis [Reference Ramsay, Fox and Chandra1, Reference De Wals12, Reference Patel and Lee13].

Analysis

The attack rates in household contacts in the included studies were tested for heterogeneity using a Cochran Q test. A Poisson model was used to calculate the weighted average attack rate in the meta-analysis using Stata 9.2 software (Stata Corporation, College Station, TX, USA). The number of household contacts needed to vaccinate to prevent one case of vaccine-preventable meningococcal disease among household contacts given chemoprophylaxis was calculated using the following formula:

Similarly, the formula for the number to prevent one death was:

We undertook a sensitivity analysis on these estimates.

RESULTS

The literature search identified 652 abstracts, of which 173 were duplicates. After review of the abstracts 447 were excluded. After review of the full text of 32 papers by two authors, six were included in the meta-analysis [Reference Cooke11, Reference Hastings14Reference Stefanoff18] (Fig. 1). The main reasons for exclusion were reports of small outbreaks (<10 cases), reports on cases outside the household setting, or administration of ineffective chemoprophylaxis to contacts.

Fig. 1. Progress through the stages of the literature review.

All were observational studies that measured attack rates in household contacts of primary cases. Three studies were prospective (data collected as clusters occurred) and three retrospective. We found no randomized controlled trials or observational studies that compared attack rates in vaccinated and unvaccinated groups after chemoprophylaxis. The six studies reported on a total of 4630 primary cases and 30 household clusters with 40 subsequent cases (Table 1).

Table 1. Characteristics of studies investigating subsequent cases of meningococcal disease in household contacts used in this review

HHC, Household contacts; CHP, chemoprophylaxis; SAR, subsequent attack rate; n.a., not available.

* Estimate.

At least one case in the cluster diagnosed with serogroup B, the other case in the cluster diagnosed on clinical grounds only.

Two subsequent cases occurred in a HHC who had received CHP, but not all HHC had received CHP.

§ Time interval of all subsequent cases among HHC regardless of whether or not they received CHP.

Meningococcal disease attack rates among household contacts (those receiving effective chemoprophylaxis) in the six studies were statistically homogeneous (Q=1·469, P=0·689). Therefore a fixed-effect Poisson model was used for the meta-analysis. The attack rate derived from this model was 1·08/1000 contacts (95% CI 0·7–1·7) (Table 2) in the time period 14–365 days after disease onset in the primary case. After a case of meningococcal disease due to a vaccine-preventable serogroup, our best estimate of the number of household contacts needing vaccination (in addition to chemoprophylaxis) to prevent one case ranged between 638 and 1678.

Table 2. Sensitivity analysis – number needed to vaccinate (NNV) to prevent one case, or one death

SAR, subsequent attack rate; HHC, household contact.

Duration of follow-up was at least 31 days in all studies. Two studies had no follow-up beyond 31 days [15, Reference Samuelsson17] and the end point was not well defined in three studies [Reference Cooke11, Reference Scholten16, Reference Stefanoff18]. In one study [Reference Cooke11] the time interval between the primary and the subsequent case was reported as aggregated data (individual cluster data not available from authors) without precise dates of subsequent cases among household contacts. No studies reported on subsequent cases beyond a 1-year period.

In one study [Reference Hastings14] 93% of contacts in household clusters had received chemoprophylaxis. In another study [Reference Cooke11], covering an earlier period in the same country, no information was available on this proportion. For analysis we assumed that 95% of household contacts of primary cases were given effective chemoprophylaxis in both these studies. Proportions of contacts given effective prophylaxis in the other studies varied between 25% and 90% (Table 1).

All studies included laboratory-confirmed and clinically diagnosed cases. Of the clusters in households given chemoprophylaxis, all the cases in household contacts were microbiologically confirmed in three studies [Reference Cooke11, Reference Scholten16, Reference Stefanoff18] and none had a different serogroup to that of the primary case. In two studies there were no cases in these contacts [15, Reference Samuelsson17], and in one study [Reference Hastings14] it was reported that 67% of cases in clusters were confirmed and that cases within all household clusters were caused by the same or possibly the same serogroup.

DISCUSSION

Meningococcal disease is a severe illness with high attack rates in household contacts. Our best estimate of the attack rate among household contacts who received chemoprophylaxis with an antibiotic capable of eradicating meningococcal carriage (108/100 000) was 11 times higher than the CDC threshold for mass vaccination in outbreaks (10/100 000) [Reference Stefanoff18]. Using existing data on vaccine efficacy, we estimated that between 640 and 1680 contacts need vaccinating to prevent a case. This is less or similar to equivalent figures in vaccination programmes that have been implemented in developed countries and that are considered cost effective, such as seasonal influenza and routine pneumococcal immunization [Reference Lewis20, Reference Kelly21]. Cost-effectiveness of a meningococcal vaccination policy for contacts would depend on the costs of vaccination and the health-care costs of case management, both varying by type of vaccine used (conjugate or polysaccharide) and by country. There would also be high additional costs to the family and society of death and disability.

The potential impact of routine vaccination of household contacts on the attack rate among household contacts is shown in Danish surveillance data [Reference Samuelsson22]. In Denmark, vaccination of household contacts has been recommended to the same group of persons as for those who receive chemoprophylaxis when the primary case is due to a vaccine-preventable serogroup since 1992. Between 1980 and 1992, before the introduction of this policy, seven serogroup C clusters were reported in household settings, with eight subsequent cases of which four occurred more than 15 days after hospitalization of the primary case. Between 1992 and 1996, after introduction of the vaccination policy, five serogroup C clusters were recorded in a household setting, all subsequent cases in these clusters occurring within the first 6 days after hospitalization of the primary case. The absence of late cases suggests benefit from vaccination.

The estimates of risk of meningococcal disease among household contacts in the six studies were consistent. All studies had limitations of data quality from incomplete data or follow-up. However, most of these limitations would have led to an underestimate of the risk in household contacts, resulting in an overestimate of the number needed to vaccinate to prevent a case. First, only one of the six studies had a follow-up period of 365 days, and only two detected subsequent cases beyond a 6-week interval. The longer the interval between the primary case and any subsequent case, the more likely that the subsequent case would be reported as a primary case. The inability to link subsequent cases that occur more than 1 month after the primary case to the primary case, results in an underestimation of the subsequent attack rate. Second, the probable overestimate of the proportion of household contacts given effective chemoprophylaxis in two studies would have led to an underestimate of the attack rate in this group. Third, the assumption of equal time distribution is not likely to be correct. Cases in persons given effective chemoprophylaxis occur later than in those not or incorrectly treated. Fourth, the minimum period of 14 days assumed necessary for a vaccination strategy to become effective may be too long. Protective levels of antibodies can be detected 5 days after vaccination [Reference Jackson23, Reference Greenwood, Hassan-King and Whittle24] and, if there is more rapid diagnosis and vaccine administration, the estimated 7-day interval between diagnosis and vaccination [Reference Samuelsson17] could be reduced. Therefore, countries with rapid diagnostic capacities and efficient systems for vaccine administration may be able to prevent more subsequent cases among household contacts. Fifth, some contacts of primary cases due to vaccine-preventable serogroups may have actually been given meningococcal polysaccharide vaccines in addition to chemoprophylaxis; this information was not available in most studies.

One possible reason for overestimating risk would be that some cases in clusters were clinically diagnosed, so that some may not have been true cases or may have been due to a different serogroup. However, in all but one study the cases in household contacts were microbiologically confirmed and no clusters were identified where the cases were due to different serogroups. To calculate the number of household contacts of a primary case caused by a vaccine-preventable serogroup needed to vaccinate to prevent one secondary case we assumed a similar subsequent attack rate for all serogroups including B. This assumption is supported by data on clusters in educational settings [Reference Davison25]. Serogroup B clusters would not be currently preventable by vaccination. Another possibility is that the cases themselves may not have been treated with antibiotics that eradicated carriage [Reference Cooke11] such that chemoprophylaxis of the household was not optimal. Whatever drug regime is used it is clear that chemoprophylaxis cannot be 100% effective in eradicating carriage in the household or in preventing virulent strains from re-entering the family. Family members among household contacts may also be at increased risk due to genetic susceptibility.

Without the evidence of a randomized controlled trial, the findings of this review support vaccination of household contacts of meningococcal disease cases in developed countries. We do not consider that the data are strong enough to give point estimates of risk and benefit, but the true values of attack rate and number needed to vaccinate are likely to lie within or below the range of estimates given. The effectiveness of giving serogroup A vaccines in a setting where antibiotics are not used for household contacts has been shown [Reference Greenwood, Hassan-King and Whittle24]. We believe that in developed countries, household contacts of a case should be given chemoprophylaxis and, if the primary case is caused by a vaccine-preventable serogroup that contacts should also receive an appropriate vaccine. Such a policy would have a low impact on disease burden when the incidence of disease due to such strains is low and as most cases are sporadic [Reference Hastings14, Reference Hoebe26]. Conversely this public health measure would also have a low cost and our estimates suggest that it is cost effective. Some countries have recently seen a dramatic fall in incidence following the introduction of meningococcal serogroup C conjugate vaccines into childhood vaccination programmes [Reference Trotter27]. Household contacts of cases due to serogroup C and who have already received C conjugate vaccine are expected to have long-term protection. Moreover, although polysaccharide vaccines are less effective in young children, quadrivalent conjugate vaccines are licensed in North America [Reference Granoff and Pollard28], and may soon be available in Europe. Therefore our recommendation should apply to those contacts of cases caused by A, C, W135 and Y strains who have not received an appropriate conjugate vaccine, and potentially in the future to contacts of cases due to B serogroups when new vaccines become available.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We are very grateful to Caroline Trotter, Sabine de Greeff and Germaine Hanquet for their very helpful comments on the draft manuscript.

DECLARATION OF INTEREST

None.

References

REFERENCES

1. Ramsay, M, Fox, A, Chandra, M. Invasive Neisseria meningitidis in Europe. European Union Invasive Bacterial Infectious Surveillance Network, 2003–2004 (http://www.euibis.org).Google Scholar
2. Borg, J, et al. Outcomes of meningococcal disease during the teenage peak. Archives of Diseases in Childhood 2003; 88: 426429.Google Scholar
3. Wang, VJ, et al. Meningococcal disease among children who live in a large metropolitan area, 1981–1996. Clinical Infectious Disease 2001; 32: 10041009.Google Scholar
4. De Wals, P, et al. Meningococcal disease in Belgium. Secondary attack rate among household, day-care nursery and pre-elementary school contacts. Journal of Infection 1981; 3: 5361.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
5. Munford, RS, et al. Spread of meningococcal infection within households. Lancet 1974; 1: 12751278.Google Scholar
6. Purcell, B, et al. Effectiveness of antibiotics in preventing meningococcal disease after a case: systematic review. British Medical Journal 2004; 328: 13391342.Google Scholar
7. Fraser, A, et al. Antibiotics for preventing meningococcal infections [Review]. The Cochrane Library, 2005; Chichester, UK; John Wiley & Sons Ltd.Google Scholar
8. Stuart, JM, et al. Does eradication of meningococcal carriage in household contacts prevent secondary cases of meningococcal disease? British Medical Journal 1989; 298: 569570.Google Scholar
9. Hoek, M, et al. A European survey on public health policies for managing cases of meningococcal disease and their contacts. Eurosurveillance 2008; 13(10).Google Scholar
10. Begg, N. Policies for public health management of meningococcal disease. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health 1999; 53: 16.Google Scholar
11. Cooke, RPD, et al. Secondary cases of meningococcal infection among close family and household contacts in England and Wales, 1984–7. British Medical Journal 1989; 298: 555558.Google Scholar
12. De Wals, P, et al. Cost-effectiveness of immunization strategies for the control of serogroup C meningococcal disease. Vaccine 2004; 22: 12331240.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
13. Patel, M, Lee, CK. Polysaccharide vaccines for preventing serogroup A meningococcal meningitis. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2005, Issue 1, Art. No.: CD001093. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD001093.pub2.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
14. Hastings, L, et al. A retrospective survey of clusters of meningococcal disease in England and Wales, 1993 to 1995: estimated risks of further cases in household and educational settings. Communicable Disease Report Review 1997; 7: 195200.Google Scholar
15. Meningococcal Disease Surveillance Group. Meningococcal disease: secondary attack rate and chemoprophylaxis in the United States, 1974. Journal of the American Medical Association 1976; 235: 261265.Google Scholar
16. Scholten, RJP, et al. Secondary cases of meningococcal disease in the Netherlands, 1989–1990 A reappraisal of chemoprohylaxis. Nederlands Tijdschrift van de Geneeskunde 1993; 137: 15051508.Google Scholar
17. Samuelsson, S, et al. Prevention of secondary cases of meningococcal disease in Denmark. Journal of Epidemiology and Infection 2000; 124: 433440.Google Scholar
18. Stefanoff, P, et al. Detection of meningococcal household clusters and their prophylaxis in changing epidemiological situation of invasive meningococcal disease in Poland. Eurosurveillance 2008; 13(10).CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
19. CDC. Control and prevention of meningococcal disease and control and prevention of serogroup C meningococcal disease: evaluation and management of suspected outbreaks. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 1997; 46: 121.Google Scholar
20. Lewis, EN, et al. Childhood influenza: number needed to vaccinate to prevent 1 hospitalization or outpatient visit. Pediatrics 2007; 120: 467472.Google Scholar
21. Kelly, H, et al. The number needed to vaccinate (NNV) and population extensions of the NNV: comparison of influenza and pneumococcal vaccine programmes for people aged 65 years and over. Vaccine 2004; 22: 21922198.Google Scholar
22. Samuelsson, S. Surveillance and prevention of meningococcal disease in Denmark 1980–96 (Ph.D. thesis). Faculty of Health Sciences, Southern Denmark, 1999.Google Scholar
23. Jackson, LA, et al. Should college students be vaccinated against meningococcal disease? A cost-benefit analysis. American Journal of Public Health 1995; 85: 843845.Google Scholar
24. Greenwood, M, Hassan-King, M, Whittle, HC. Prevention of secondary cases of meningococcal disease in household contacts by vaccination. British Medical Journal 1978; 21: 13171319.Google Scholar
25. Davison, KL, et al. Clusters of meningococcal disease in school and preschool settings in England and Wales: what is the risk? Archives of Disease in Childhood 2004; 89: 256260.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
26. Hoebe, CPA, et al. Space-time clustering analysis of invasive meningococcal disease. Emerging Infectious Diseases 2004; 10: 16211626.Google Scholar
27. Trotter, C, et al. Effectiveness of meningococcal serogroup C conjugate vaccine 4 years after introduction. Lancet 2004; 364, 365367.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
28. Granoff, D, Pollard, A. Reconsideration of the use of meningococcal polysaccharide vaccine. Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal 2007, 26: 716722.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Fig. 1. Progress through the stages of the literature review.

Figure 1

Table 1. Characteristics of studies investigating subsequent cases of meningococcal disease in household contacts used in this review

Figure 2

Table 2. Sensitivity analysis – number needed to vaccinate (NNV) to prevent one case, or one death