JMIR Public Health and Surveillance (Feb 2024)

The Effectiveness of National Expanded Program on Immunization With Hepatitis A Vaccines in the Chinese Mainland: Interrupted Time-Series Analysis

  • Bo-Wen Ming,
  • Li Li,
  • Hao-Neng Huang,
  • Jia-Jun Ma,
  • Chen Shi,
  • Xiao-Han Xu,
  • Zhou Yang,
  • Chun-Quan Ou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/53982
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10
p. e53982

Abstract

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BackgroundThe high prevalence of hepatitis A delivered a blow to public health decades ago. The World Health Organization (WHO) set a goal to eliminate viral hepatitis including hepatitis A by 2030. In 2008, hepatitis A vaccines were integrated into the Expanded Program on Immunization (EPI) in China to alleviate the burden of hepatitis A, although the effectiveness of the EPI has not been well investigated. ObjectiveWe aimed to evaluate the intervention effect at both provincial and national levels on the incidence of hepatitis A in the Chinese mainland from 2005 to 2019. MethodsBased on the monthly reported number of hepatitis A cases from 2005 to 2019 in each provincial-level administrative division, we adopted generalized additive models with an interrupted time-series design to estimate province-specific effects of the EPI on the incidence of hepatitis A among the target population (children aged 2-9 years) from 2005 to 2019. We then pooled province-specific effect estimates using random-effects meta-analyses. We also assessed the effect among the nontarget population and the whole population. ResultsA total of 98,275 hepatitis A cases among children aged 2-9 years were reported in the Chinese mainland from 2005 to 2019, with an average annual incidence of 5.33 cases per 100,000 persons. Nationally, the EPI decreased the hepatitis A incidence by 80.77% (excess risk [ER] –80.77%, 95% CI –85.86% to –72.92%) during the study period, guarding an annual average of 28.52 (95% empirical CI [eCI] 27.37-29.00) cases per 100,000 persons among the target children against hepatitis A. Western China saw a more significant effect of the EPI on the decrease in the incidence of hepatitis A among the target children. A greater number of target children were protected from onset in Northwest and Southwest China, with an excess incidence rate of –129.72 (95% eCI –135.67 to –117.86) and –66.61 (95% eCI –67.63 to –64.22) cases per 100,000 persons on average, respectively. Intervention effects among nontarget (ER –32.88%, 95% CI –39.76% to –25.21%) and whole populations (ER –31.97%, 95% CI –39.61% to –23.37%) were relatively small. ConclusionsThe EPI has presented a lasting positive effect on the containment of hepatitis A in the target population in China. The EPI’s effect on the target children also provided a degree of indirect protection for unvaccinated individuals. The continuous surveillance of hepatitis A and the maintenance of mass vaccination should shore up the accomplishment in the decline of hepatitis A incidence to ultimately achieve the goal set by the WHO.