11. People Living with HIV During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Who Did (or Did Not) Receive Annual Influenza Vaccination?

Abstract Background Nationally, younger adults and racial minorities have lower levels of influenza vaccination (influenza vaccination = vaccine) than non-Hispanic White adults. During the 2015-16 season, most vaccine decliners in our program were male, black, and 45-66 years of age. As part of a quality improvement (QI) initiative to increase 2020-21 vaccine coverage amongst PLWH, we sought to compare patient characteristics between vaccine recipients and non-recipients. Methods Our program cares for 60% of Delawareans with HIV. The largest site in Wilmington was the QI site. IRB exemption was received, and pre-defined sociodemographic and HIV-specific variables were extracted from the EMR and CareWare from 1 Oct 2020 through 31 March 2021. Patient reports of external vaccine required confirmation. All PLWH ≥ 18 years of age, including those newly establishing care, met eligibility criteria. Comparisons between vaccinated and unvaccinated PLWH were performed using Wilcoxon rank sum tests for continuous variables and chi-squared tests for categorical variables. A multivariable logistic regression model, including age, sex, race, insurance, poverty level, HIV status, and virologic suppression, was used to predict vaccine. Results 780 patients met study inclusion criteria and 86% (667/780) received vaccine. Characteristics of PLWH with and without vaccine are presented in Table 1. Older age, lower HIV viral load, and virologic suppression had a statistically significant (p< 0.05) association with vaccine receipt in unadjusted analysis. Only older age (p< 0.01) was significantly associated with vaccine in logistic regression modeling (Table 2), however this relationship was non-linear. Table 1. Characteristics of patients living with HIV during the 2020-2021 Influenza vaccination season Table 2. Multivariable Analysis of Baseline Characteristics Conclusion A very high rate of PLWH received vaccine, far exceeding local and national benchmarks, with EMR data unlikely to have fully captured all vaccines. The role of the COVID-19 pandemic in vaccine amongst PLWH is not yet known. While older age was associated with vaccine in adjusted analysis, the number of unvaccinated patients was small, confidence intervals wide, and associations consequently weak. Larger studies are needed to further investigate factors associated with vaccine receipt amongst PLWH. Disclosures Deborah A. Kahal, MD,MPH, FACP, Gilead (Speaker’s Bureau)Viiv (Speaker’s Bureau)

No virus was detected in the trachea or lungs. The detection limit of the assay (horizontal dashed line) was 1.5 log10 TCID50/mL and 20 FFU respectively. Virus titer between groups was significant on day 3 of the nasal washes: oneway analysis of variance (ANOVA) with Multiple t tests to compare between groups, #p<0.05,><0.01,><> Conclusion. Despite eliciting similar Ab titers, the Quad M2SR demonstrated superior protection compared to QIV in a drifted influenza B challenge model in ferrets. These results suggest that the intranasal M2SR platform may confer additional advantages over currently available vaccines. Quad M2SR is in late-stage development for testing in a first-in-human clinical study.
Disclosures Background. Nationally, younger adults and racial minorities have lower levels of influenza vaccination (influenza vaccination = vaccine) than non-Hispanic White adults. During the 2015-16 season, most vaccine decliners in our program were male, black, and 45-66 years of age. As part of a quality improvement (QI) initiative to increase 2020-21 vaccine coverage amongst PLWH, we sought to compare patient characteristics between vaccine recipients and non-recipients.
Methods. Our program cares for 60% of Delawareans with HIV. The largest site in Wilmington was the QI site. IRB exemption was received, and pre-defined sociodemographic and HIV-specific variables were extracted from the EMR and CareWare from 1 Oct 2020 through 31 March 2021. Patient reports of external vaccine required confirmation. All PLWH ≥ 18 years of age, including those newly establishing care, met eligibility criteria. Comparisons between vaccinated and unvaccinated PLWH were performed using Wilcoxon rank sum tests for continuous variables and chi-squared tests for categorical variables. A multivariable logistic regression model, including age, sex, race, insurance, poverty level, HIV status, and virologic suppression, was used to predict vaccine.
Results. 780 patients met study inclusion criteria and 86% (667/780) received vaccine. Characteristics of PLWH with and without vaccine are presented in Table  1. Older age, lower HIV viral load, and virologic suppression had a statistically significant (p< 0.05) association with vaccine receipt in unadjusted analysis. Only older age (p< 0.01) was significantly associated with vaccine in logistic regression modeling (Table 2), however this relationship was non-linear.

Conclusion.
A very high rate of PLWH received vaccine, far exceeding local and national benchmarks, with EMR data unlikely to have fully captured all vaccines. The role of the COVID-19 pandemic in vaccine amongst PLWH is not yet known. While older age was associated with vaccine in adjusted analysis, the number of unvaccinated patients was small, confidence intervals wide, and associations consequently weak. Larger studies are needed to further investigate factors associated with vaccine receipt amongst PLWH.
Disclosures. Deborah A. Kahal, MD,MPH, FACP, Gilead (Speaker's Bureau)Viiv (Speaker's Bureau) Background. During the COVID-19 pandemic, adult vaccination in the United States (US) decreased substantially in 2020. Unlike other vaccine-preventable diseases where individuals may have experienced reduced risk due to COVID-related mitigation efforts (e.g., lockdown restrictions, use of face masks), individuals remained at risk of herpes zoster (HZ). This study projects the impact of reduced recombinant zoster vaccine (RZV) use on HZ cases and complications in the US.

Methods. A multi-cohort Markov model estimated the impact of missed RZV vaccinations, by comparing scenarios with and without missed vaccinations between
Apr-Dec 2020, on cases of HZ, postherpetic neuralgia (PHN), and quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) among US adults aged ≥ 50 years. Epidemiology, RZV efficacy, and utility inputs were obtained from standard US sources, clinical trial data, and published literature. Missed doses were estimated using data on RZV doses and an assumed 43% reduction in RZV vaccinations during the pandemic, based on publicly available data. Deterministic sensitivity and scenario analyses were conducted.
Results. In 2020, approximately 21 million (M) RZV distributed doses were expected, including an estimated 9.2M RZV series initiations in Apr-Dec. An estimated 3.9M RZV series initiations were missed, resulting in 31,945 projected HZ cases, 2,714 PHN cases, and 610 lost QALYs projected over a 1-year follow up. If individuals with missed RZV initiations remain unvaccinated in 2021, avoidable HZ cases will increase to 63,117 over 2 years. Further, if the same number of RZV initiations are missed in 2021, 95,062 avoidable HZ cases are expected. In a sensitivity analysis assuming 30% RZV reduction, 18,020 avoidable HZ cases and 1,531 PHN cases were observed over 1 year.
Conclusion. Adding to the substantial COVID-19 infection-related morbidity and mortality, reduced RZV use during the pandemic resulted in further burden from avoidable HZ cases. Health care providers should continue to emphasize the importance of vaccination against HZ and other preventable diseases during the pandemic. Background. Two pneumococcal vaccines are currently recommended for use in U.S. adults: 23-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine (PPSV23) and 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV13). Recommendations for adult PCV13 use were supported by a large randomized-controlled trial (RCT) demonstrating PCV13 efficacy against pneumococcal pneumonia (PnPn) and vaccine-type (VT) PnPn in older adults. New pneumococcal conjugate vaccines are expected to be licensed for adults in late 2021 and recommendations for use among adults will be reviewed and revised, as needed. We conducted a systematic review to summarize evidence on the vaccine efficacy and effectiveness (VE) of PPSV23 and PCV13 against PnPn among adults.
Methods. We conducted a search of literature published from 1998 to February 2021 on PCV13 and PPSV23 VE studies using eight reference databases. Studies targeting adults with immunocompromising conditions were excluded. VE results with 95% confidence intervals (CI) were abstracted and stratified by vaccine product, outcome evaluated (PnPn and VT PnPn), study design, and effect measure. When applicable, random effects models were used to estimate pooled VE and I-squared statistic was reported to assess heterogeneity.