Connect
MJA
MJA

Incidence of pandemic (H1N1) 2009 influenza infection in children and pregnant women during the 2009 influenza season in Western Australia — a seroprevalence study

Gary K Dowse, David W Smith, Heath Kelly, Ian Barr, Karen L Laurie, Anthony R Jones, Anthony D Keil and Paul Effler
Med J Aust 2011; 194 (2): 68-72. || doi: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.2011.tb04170.x
Published online: 17 January 2011

Abstract

Objective: To determine antibody levels and estimate incidence of infection with pandemic (H1N1) 2009 influenza in children and pregnant women during the 2009 winter in Western Australia.

Design, setting and participants: Two cross-sectional serosurveys using stored specimens collected for unrelated pathology testing, from before and after (3 August to 30 November 2009) circulation of the pandemic virus, and before commencement of the pandemic vaccination program. Specimens were from three groups: children aged 1–4 years, older children and teenagers aged 5–19 years, and pregnant women aged 21–45 years. The groups were geographically representative of the WA population.

Main outcome measures: Reactivity against pandemic (H1N1) 2009 and seasonal A(H1N1) influenza viruses measured using haemagglutination inhibition (HI) assays.

Results: Antibody titres were determined for 648 individuals in the prepandemic period and 736 in the postpandemic period. In the prepandemic period, HI titres ≥ 40 against the pandemic virus were found in 0 (95% CI, 0.0%–1.6%) children aged 1–4 years, 8.3% (95% CI, 5.3%–12.7%) of older children and teenagers, and 4.5% (95% CI, 2.4%–8.3%) of pregnant women. In postpandemic specimens collected from 1 September 2009 (when influenza activity had declined to near-baseline levels), estimated infection rates (subtracting prepandemic levels) were 25.4% (95% CI for difference, 18.6%–33.4%) in 1–4-year-old children, 39.4% (95% CI, 29.8%–48.5%) in older children and teenagers, and 10.2% (95% CI, 4.1%–17.1%) in pregnant women.

Conclusions: A quarter of preschool children and about 40% of school-aged children and older teenagers had serological evidence of pandemic influenza infection during winter 2009, indicating high levels of mild or asymptomatic infection. The infection rate in pregnant women was much lower. The high infection rates in children help explain the reduced impact of the pandemic virus during the 2010 winter. Augmented by vaccination, there should be sufficiently high levels of immunity in the Australian population to significantly reduce the impact of the virus in future influenza seasons.

The first influenza pandemic of the 21st century has raised many questions about the appropriateness of the public health response. Although a relatively mild disease in most people, there have been over 18 000 deaths attributed to the pandemic (H1N1) 2009 influenza virus worldwide since it emerged.1 During the 2009 Australian winter, the median age of infection, based on laboratory-confirmed cases, was 21 years, with higher median ages for hospitalisation (31 years), intensive care treatment (44 years) and death (53 years).2 Overall, mortality from laboratory-confirmed infection and estimates of the case-fatality rate have been lower than anticipated.3-5

Accurate estimates of the population incidence of infection are critical to assessing pathogenicity of the pandemic virus, providing context to indicators of pandemic severity (including rates of hospitalisation, intensive care unit [ICU] admission and death associated with confirmed infection), and estimates of the clinical attack rate and case-fatality rate.4,5 Serosurveys measuring antibodies to pandemic (H1N1) 2009 influenza virus capture both people with asymptomatic infection and those who were ill but did not seek medical attention, allowing an estimate of the true proportion of the population infected.

We report the frequency of protective antibody levels determined in two cross-sectional serosurveys using convenience samples of blood specimens collected before and after circulation of pandemic (H1N1) 2009 influenza. We provide estimates of the cumulative incidence of infection (“infection rate”) in children and pregnant women during the 2009 winter season in Western Australia. We targeted these groups because children had the highest notification and hospitalisation rates associated with pandemic influenza and pregnant women were at increased risk of more serious disease.6,7 These data improve our understanding of the impact of the pandemic virus, inform understanding of disease activity during 2010 and estimates for future years, and guide policy on mitigation strategies, including vaccination.

Methods
Study sample

WA has a single large public health laboratory system — PathWest Laboratory Medicine WA — that provides a high proportion of diagnostic services throughout the state. Specimens were selected from samples received at PathWest for a range of routine diagnostic serological tests. If the patient was undergoing testing for respiratory infection, the samples were excluded, as were those with inadequate residual volume.

Eligible specimens were those collected:

Based on an estimated infection rate of 20% in the target groups, with 5% precision for the 95% confidence interval, we determined an optimal sample size of 246 for the postpandemic period in each of three study groups: preschool children (aged 1–4 years), school-aged children and older teenagers (aged 5–19 years), and pregnant women (aged 21–45 years). An attempt was made to retrieve similar numbers for the prepandemic period. Quotas were calculated so that specimens selected for each study group and period matched as closely as possible the geographical distribution of the WA population, determined by postcode allocation to major administrative regions. Specimens were selected sequentially from the laboratory database until quotas were filled. It was not possible to fill all period quotas, and the final sample comprised 1389 specimens collected from 400 children aged 1–4 years (229 prepandemic; 171 postpandemic), 499 children and older teenagers aged 5–19 years (218 prepandemic; 281 postpandemic), and 490 pregnant women (202 prepandemic; 288 postpandemic).

The selected sera, stored at 20°C until retrieval, were thawed and a 200 μL sample of each was transferred to a tube labelled with the study code. Age, postcode and collection date were linked to the study code. Samples were refrozen, stored at 20°C and transported on dry ice to the World Health Organization Collaborating Centre for Reference and Research on Influenza in Melbourne for testing.

Haemagglutination inhibition assays

Reactivity of sera against pandemic (H1N1) 2009 and seasonal A(H1N1) influenza viruses was measured using haemagglutination inhibition (HI) assays.8 Egg-grown A/California/7/2009 virus was purified by sucrose gradient, concentrated and inactivated with β-propiolactone to create an influenza zonal pool preparation (a gift from CSL Ltd, Melbourne). Sera were pretreated with receptor-destroying enzyme (RDE [II], Denka Seiken, Tokyo, Japan) and tested as described previously.9 Titres were expressed as the reciprocal of the highest dilution of serum at which haemagglutination was prevented. HI titres ≥ 40 were regarded as significant, based on accepted criteria for determining immunity and vaccine responses.10

Results

Five specimens were excluded because of non-specific haemagglutination (titres ≥ 40) even after red blood cell absorption, leaving 1384 study subjects. The Perth metropolitan area was slightly under-represented, both overall (62.4% of the study population v 77.6% of the state population) and within each study group. However, there was no difference in the regional representation for any study group between the prepandemic and postpandemic periods.

There was a significant increase in the GMT against pandemic (H1N1) 2009 virus in the postpandemic period compared with the prepandemic period for each study group (Box 2). GMT also varied significantly between study groups in the prepandemic period (F = 15.5; P < 0.001), largely reflecting the lower GMT for the 1–4-years age group (5.1 [95% CI, 5.0–5.1]) compared with the similar GMTs for the 5–19-years age group (6.5 [95% CI, 5.9–7.1]) and pregnant women (6.5 [95% CI, 5.9–7.1]). In the postpandemic period, GMT for the 5–19-years age group (18.2 [95% CI, 14.9–22.3]) was significantly higher than that for the 1–4-years age group (10.3 [95% CI, 8.4–12.7]) and pregnant women (8.6 [95% CI, 7.6–9.7]) (F = 21.2; P < 0.001).

Reverse cumulative distribution curves comparing prepandemic and postpandemic HI titres are shown in Box 3. For both the 1–4-years and 5–19-years age groups, there was a stepwise increase in the cumulative proportion of subjects with HI titres indicating exposure to the pandemic virus in the August and September–November periods compared with the prepandemic period. For pregnant women, there was little difference between the curves for August and September.

In the prepandemic period, HI titres ≥ 40 against the pandemic virus were found in 0 (95% CI, 0–1.6%) 1–4-year-olds, 8.3% (95% CI, 5.3%–12.7%) of 5–19-year-olds, and 4.5% (95% CI, 2.4%–8.3%) of pregnant women (Box 4). In the postpandemic period, the proportion of subjects with HI titres ≥ 40 increased significantly for each study group for all sample-collection periods.

When the postpandemic period was restricted to specimens collected from 1 September, the estimated infection rate during winter (subtracting prepandemic levels) was 25.4% (95% CI for difference, 18.6%–33.4%) in the 1–4-years age group, 39.4% (95% CI, 29.8%–48.5%) in the 5–19-years age group, and 10.2% (95% CI, 4.1%–17.1%) for pregnant women, indicating significantly higher infection rates for both 1–4-year-olds and 5–19-year-olds compared with pregnant women (Box 4). At the end of winter, 47.7% of 5–19-year-olds, 25.4% of 1–4-year-olds, and 14.7% of pregnant women had HI titres ≥ 40 against pandemic (H1N1) 2009.

We compared HI titres against the pandemic and seasonal H1N1 viruses to determine whether cross-reacting seasonal H1 antibody was producing positive pandemic HI antibody results in our assay. There was only a weak positive correlation (r = 0.14; P < 0.001) between log10-transformed titres against the pandemic and seasonal viruses in the prepandemic period, and no correlation in the postpandemic period (r = 0.07; P = 0.08).

Discussion

We estimate that pandemic (H1N1) 2009 influenza virus infected around 25.4% of children aged 1–4 years, 39.4% of older children and teenagers, and 10.2% of pregnant women during the 2009 influenza season in WA. This is one of the first serological estimates of pandemic (H1N1) 2009 infection rates in a population over a complete influenza season, the first to target pregnant women, and one of the first to study children. The infection rate in children and teenagers was significantly higher than that in pregnant women.

A cohort study testing the same individuals before and after the influenza season, and defining exposure on the basis of a fourfold rise in the HI titre, would be the preferred method to determine pandemic virus infection rates. However, this was not possible given the unexpected emergence of the virus. Instead, we compared two cross-sectional samples, with specimens at each period retrieved opportunistically from residual sera stored after diagnostic testing for non-respiratory indications. There is no reason to believe that this method should confer significant bias to estimates of influenza infection, compared with estimates from a random population sample. Convenience sampling of residual diagnostic sera has been shown to produce similar estimates of immunity to vaccine-preventable diseases in children to those obtained from random population samples.12 Residual diagnostic sera are also used to evaluate vaccine programs in other countries.13

We believe our results are broadly representative of pandemic (H1N1) 2009 virus infection rates in WA. Although the Perth metropolitan area was slightly under-represented in our study sample compared with the state population, there was no difference in the regional representation for any study group, comparing prepandemic and postpandemic periods. Moreover, while the study was not designed to look for regional differences, seroprevalence and HI titres did not vary by region of residence (data not shown). Given the similarity of epidemiological features of the 2009 pandemic around Australia,6 our findings are likely to be broadly generalisable to Australia as a whole.

There was no evidence to suggest that infection with seasonal A(H1N1) influenza virus or vaccination against seasonal influenza, between May and November 2009, contributed to the increase in antibody titres against the pandemic virus. First, seasonal A(H1N1) influenza infection was very unlikely, as it comprised only 1.9% of isolates during the 2009 season. Second, there was a poor correlation between HI titres against the pandemic A/California/7/2009 virus and those against the A/Brisbane/59/2007 seasonal vaccine strain. Third, antibodies against the pandemic virus were not detected in 1–4-year-olds in the prepandemic period, even though WA ran a free two-dose seasonal influenza vaccination program for preschool children in 2008 and 2009, with an estimated coverage of at least 32%. Our data are consistent with the finding of Hancock and colleagues14 that antibodies produced in response to seasonal influenza vaccines provide little or no cross-protection against the pandemic virus.

In specimens collected from September to November 2009 in WA, estimated infection rates for pandemic influenza were remarkably similar to estimated rates in England following its intense “spring” epidemic wave in 2009. Using a similar study design, Miller and colleagues15 found an incidence of infection of 21.3% in children aged under 5 years (compared with 25.4% in WA), 42.0% in children aged 5–14 years (39.4% in children aged 5–19 years in WA), and 6.2% in adults aged 25–45 years (10.2% in pregnant women aged 21–45 years in WA). A French study of pregnant women aged 20–39 years, tested around November 2009, found a cumulative seroprevalence of elevated HI titres against pandemic H1N1 virus of 10.6%.16 These findings, along with recent estimates from other populations using various study designs,9,17,18 suggest that the arrival of the pandemic virus in modern urbanised and non-immune populations may have resulted in broadly similar infection rates in both the southern and northern hemispheres.

Annual seasonal influenza infection rates in preschool and school-aged children are generally high, ranging from around 10% to 40% in prospective studies, and children are regarded as the most important source of community-wide influenza transmission.19-21 Estimated infection rates for pandemic influenza in children during the 2009 winter in WA were at the upper end of rates observed previously for seasonal influenza.

Based on sentinel surveillance data, clinical attack rates for pandemic influenza were estimated to be about 1% in England (to November 2009)5 and 7.5% in New Zealand.4 The wide disparity between these estimated clinical attack rates and the serologically determined infection rates from our study and other studies9,15,17,18 suggests that the pandemic (H1N1) 2009 virus causes a substantial amount of asymptomatic or very mild infection. This is consistent with data from volunteers infected with seasonal influenza H1N1: a third were completely asymptomatic, while a further third had no fever.22 To properly understand the pathogenicity of the pandemic (H1N1) 2009 virus, there is a need for prospective studies of the infection and clinical attack rates in the same population, with laboratory confirmation of infection.

Available data indicate that influenza vaccination in children may not only prevent childhood morbidity but also reduce school absenteeism and reduce the impact of influenza infection among adults.20,21,23 Disease modelling also suggests that vaccinating schoolchildren may be one of the most effective approaches to reducing the impact of both seasonal24 and pandemic25 influenza in the wider community. Hence, many countries, including Australia, targeted children for vaccination against pandemic influenza (H1N1) 2009.

The high incidence of pandemic virus infection in children during the 2009 southern hemisphere winter indicates that WA achieved at least partial herd immunity during the first wave. Community susceptibility would have been further reduced by vaccination programs in the latter part of 2009 and during 2010, even though uptake was not high.26 These factors explain the reduced impact of the virus in the 2010 winter, and in the absence of significant antigenic drift or increased virus transmission or virulence, should significantly attenuate pandemic (H1N1) 2009 virus activity in future influenza seasons. Even so, for people vulnerable to more severe disease — including pregnant women, in whom our study found relatively low levels of exposure during 2009 — targeted vaccination should continue to be encouraged.

Received 27 May 2010, accepted 1 September 2010

  • Gary K Dowse1
  • David W Smith2
  • Heath Kelly3
  • Ian Barr4
  • Karen L Laurie4
  • Anthony R Jones5
  • Anthony D Keil5
  • Paul Effler1

  • 1 Communicable Disease Control Directorate, WA Health, Perth, WA.
  • 2 Department of Microbiology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Western Australia, Perth, WA.
  • 3 Epidemiology Unit, Victorian Infectious Diseases Reference Laboratory, Melbourne, VIC.
  • 4 WHO Collaborating Centre for Reference and Research on Influenza, Melbourne, VIC.
  • 5 Department of Microbiology, PathWest Laboratory Medicine WA, Perth, WA.


Correspondence: gary.dowse@health.wa.gov.au

Acknowledgements: 

We thank Charmaine Sutton, Louise Norbury and Deborah Hoddy for assistance with selection and preparation of specimens. We also thank Louise Carolan for performing laboratory assays, Dr Lyn Waring for stewarding ethics applications, and Paul Saunders for helping with data analysis. The WHO Collaborating Centre for Reference and Research on Influenza, Melbourne, is supported by the Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing.

Competing interests:

None identified.

  • 1. World Health Organization. Pandemic (H1N1) 2009 — update 100. Weekly update. 14 May 2010. http://www.who.int/csr/don/2010_05_14/en/index.html (accessed May 2010).
  • 2. Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing. Australian influenza surveillance summary report. No 4, 2010, reporting period: 23–29 Jan 2010. http://www.healthemergency.gov.au/internet/healthemergency/publishing.nsf/Content/ozflu2010.htm (accessed Feb 2010).
  • 3. Baker MG, Kelly H, Wilson N. Pandemic H1N1 influenza lessons from the southern hemisphere. Euro Surveill 2009; 14: pii=19370.
  • 4. Baker MG, Wilson N, Huang QS, et al. Pandemic influenza A(H1N1)v in New Zealand: the experience from April to August 2009. Euro Surveill 2009; 14: pii=19319.
  • 5. Donaldson LJ, Rutter PD, Ellis BM, et al. Mortality from pandemic A/H1N1 2009 influenza in England: public health surveillance study. BMJ 2009; 339: b5213.
  • 6. Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing. Australian influenza surveillance summary report. No 19, 2009, reporting period: 12–18 Sep 2009. http://www.healthemergency.gov.au/internet/healthemergency/publishing.nsf/Content/ozflu2009.htm (accessed Feb 2010).
  • 7. World Health Organization. Transmission dynamics and impact of pandemic influenza A (H1N1) 2009 virus. Wkly Epidemiol Rec 2009; 84: 481-484.
  • 8. WHO Collaborating Centres for Reference and Research on Influenza. Concepts and procedures for laboratory-based influenza surveillance. Washington, DC: US Department of Health and Human Services, 1982.
  • 9. Chen MI, Lee VJM, Lim WY, et al. 2009 influenza A(H1N1) seroconversion rates and risk factors among distinct adult cohorts in Singapore. JAMA 2010; 303: 1383-1391.
  • 10. Potter CW, Oxford JS. Determinants of immunity to influenza infection in man. Br Med Bull 1979; 35: 69-75.
  • 11. Newcombe RG. Interval estimation for the difference between independent proportions: comparison of eleven methods. Stat Med 1998; 17: 873-890.
  • 12. Kelly H, Riddell MA, Gidding HF, et al. A random cluster survey and a convenience sample give comparable estimates of immunity to vaccine preventable diseases in children of school age in Victoria, Australia. Vaccine 2002; 20: 3130-3136.
  • 13. Osborne K, Gay N, Hesketh L, et al. Ten years of serological surveillance in England and Wales: methods, results, implications and action. Int J Epidemiol 2000; 29: 362-368.
  • 14. Hancock K, Veguilla V, Lu X, et al. Cross-reactive antibody responses to the 2009 pandemic H1N1 influenza virus. N Engl J Med 2009; 361: 1945-1952.
  • 15. Miller E, Hoschler K, Hardelid P, et al. Incidence of 2009 pandemic influenza A H1N1 infection in England: a cross-sectional serological study. Lancet 2010; 375: 1100-1108.
  • 16. Flahault A, de Lamballerie X, Hanslik T, Salez N. Symptomatic infections less frequent with H1N1pdm than with seasonal strains. PloS Curr 2009; Dec 28: RRN1140.
  • 17. Ross T, Zimmer S, Burke D, et al. Seroprevalence following the second wave of pandemic 2009 H1N1 influenza. PLoS Curr 2010; Feb 24: RRN1148.
  • 18. Bandaranayake D, Bissielo A, Huang S, Wood T. Seroprevalence of the 2009 influenza A (H1N1) pandemic in New Zealand. Wellington: Institute of Environmental Science and Research, 2010. http://www.moh.govt.nz/moh.nsf/pagesmh/10124/$File/seroprevalence-flu-2009.pdf (accessed Jun 2010).
  • 19. Neuzil KM, Zhu Y, Griffin MR, et al. Burden of interpandemic influenza in children younger than 5 years: a 25-year prospective study. J Infect Dis 2002; 185: 147-152.
  • 20. Committee on Infectious Diseases. Policy statement — prevention of influenza: recommendations for influenza immunization of children, 2007–2008. Pediatrics 2008; 121: e1016-e1031.
  • 21. Neuzil KM, Hohlbein C, Zhu Y. Illness among schoolchildren during influenza season. Effect on school absenteeism, parental absenteeism from work, and secondary illness in families. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 2002; 156: 986-991.
  • 22. Carrat F, Vergu E, Ferguson NM, et al. Timelines of infection and disease in human influenza: a review of volunteer challenge studies. Am J Epidemiol 2008; 167: 775-785.
  • 23. Jordan R, Connock M, Albon E, et al. Universal vaccination of children against influenza: are there indirect benefits to the community? A systematic review of the evidence. Vaccine 2006; 24: 1047-1062.
  • 24. Longini IM, Halloran ME. Strategy for distribution of influenza vaccine to high-risk groups and children. Am J Epidemiol 2005; 161: 303-306.
  • 25. Mylius SD, Hagenaars TJ, Lugnér AK, Wallinga J. Optimal allocation of pandemic influenza vaccine depends on age, risk and timing. Vaccine 2008; 26: 3742-3749.
  • 26. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. 2009 Adult Vaccination Survey — provisional topline results for H1N1 vaccination uptake. Canberra: AIHW, 2010. http://www.aihw.gov.au/pophealth/h1n1_vaccination_uptake.pdf (accessed Jun 2010).

Author

remove_circle_outline Delete Author
add_circle_outline Add Author

Comment
Do you have any competing interests to declare? *

I/we agree to assign copyright to the Medical Journal of Australia and agree to the Conditions of publication *
I/we agree to the Terms of use of the Medical Journal of Australia *
Email me when people comment on this article

Online responses are no longer available. Please refer to our instructions for authors page for more information.