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Progress Toward Measles Elimination — Philippines, 1998–2014

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Progress Toward Measles Elimination — Philippines, 1998–2014

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MMWR Weekly
Vol. 64, No. 13
April 10, 2015
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Progress Toward Measles Elimination — Philippines, 1998–2014

Weekly

April 10, 2015 / 64(13);357-362


Yoshihiro Takashima, MD1W. William Schluter, MD1Kayla Mae L. Mariano1Sergey Diorditsa, MD1Maricel de Quiroz Castro2Alan C. Ou, MD2Maria Joyce U. Ducusin, MD3Luzviminda C. Garcia,3 Dulce C. Elfa,3 Alya Dabbagh, PhD4Paul Rota, PhD5James L. Goodson, MPH6 (Author affiliations at end of text)
In 2005, the Regional Committee for the World Health Organization (WHO) Western Pacific Region (WPR) established a goal to eliminate measles* by 2012 (1).The recommended elimination strategies in WPR include 1) ≥95% 2-dose coverage with measles-containing vaccine (MCV) through routine immunization services and supplementary immunization activities (SIAs); 2) high-quality case-based measles surveillance; 3) laboratory surveillance with timely and accurate testing of specimens to confirm or discard suspected cases and detect measles virus genotypes; and 4) measles outbreak preparedness, rapid response, and appropriate case management (2). In the WPR, the Philippines set a national goal in 1998 to eliminate measles by 2008 (3). This report describes progress toward measles elimination in the Philippines during 1998–2014 and challenges remaining to achieve the goal. WHO–United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)–estimated coverage with the routine first dose of MCV (MCV1) increased from 80% in 1998 to 90% in 2013, and coverage with the routine second dose of MCV (MCV2) increased from 10% after nationwide introduction in 2010 to 53% in 2013. After nationwide SIAs in 1998 and 2004, historic lows in the numbers and incidence of reported measles cases occurred in 2006. Despite nationwide SIAs in 2007 and 2011, the number of reported cases and incidence generally increased during 2007–2012, and large measles outbreaks occurred during 2013–2014 that affected infants, young children, older children, and young adults and that were prolonged by delayed and geographically limited outbreak response immunization activities during 2013–2014. For the goal of measles elimination in WPR to be achieved, sustained investments are required in the Philippines to strengthen health systems, implement the recommended elimination strategies, and develop additional strategies to identify and reduce measles susceptibility in specific geographic areas and older age groups.
Immunization Activities
MCV1 and MCV2 coverage data are reported each year from the 17 regions§ in the Philippines to the National Immunization Programme; national coverage data are reported annually to WHO and UNICEF. WHO and UNICEF use reported data from administrative records and surveys to estimate coverage with MCV1 and MCV2 through routine immunization services. In the Philippines, MCV1 administered at age 9 months was introduced nationwide in 1983, and MCV2 administered at age 12–15 months was introduced nationwide in 2010. WHO-UNICEF–estimated MCV1 coverage increased nationally from 80% in 1998 to 92% during 2004–2008, decreased to 79% in 2011, and increased to 90% in 2013. The number of regions with >95% MCV1 coverage decreased from seven in 2007 to none in 2013. Estimated MCV2 coverage increased nationally from 10% in 2010 to 53% in 2013. During 1998–2014, approximately 76.4 million children received MCV during SIAs. Nationwide SIA coverage was 94%–95% in 1998, 2004, and 2007, but only 84% in 2011 and 91% in 2014. There was significant regional variation in vaccination coverage with MCV1 and with SIAs (Table 1).
Surveillance Activities
Sentinel site-based surveillance with reporting of line lists of suspected measles cases started in 1989; nationwide measles case-based surveillance with laboratory testing started in 1992, and virus genotyping started in 2010. Key surveillance performance indicators include 1) rate of discarded (i.e., nonmeasles) suspected cases reported per 100,000 population (target: ≥2); 2) percentage of suspected cases with adequate investigation (target: ≥80%); 3) percentage of suspected cases with adequate blood specimens collected for laboratory testing (target: ≥80%); and 4) percentage of suspected cases with results reported within 7 days of the laboratory receiving the specimen (target: ≥80%). During 2009–2011, surveillance performance improved: the discarded non-measles case rate increased from 1.6 to 3.1; the adequate case investigation rate increased from 29.5% to 88.6%; the adequate specimen collection rate increased from 74.1% to 98.0%; and the timeliness of laboratory reporting increased from 53.8% to 72.6%. However, performance declined or varied in 2012 and during the 2013–2014 measles resurgence (Table 1).
Measles Incidence and Measles Viral Genotypes
During 1998–2014, the number of annual reported measles cases varied in relation to SIAs, declining after SIAs were conducted and then increasing in subsequent years (Figure 1). Overall, annual reported measles cases and incidence per 1 million population decreased from 1,984 and 27.1 in 1998 to nine and 0.1 in 2006 and then increased to 21,403 and 233.2 in 2014. On the basis of SIAs conducted, 2007–2014 can be divided into two periods (Figure 1). During the 2007–2011 inter-SIA period,** 14,142 measles cases were reported. During the 2011–2014 inter-SIA period††, 58,700 measles cases were reported. At the national level, the proportion of measles cases in children aged 9 months–4 years decreased from 38% in the first inter-SIA period to 28% in the second inter-SIA period, and the proportion of measles cases in adolescents and adults aged ≥15 years increased from 18% in the first period to 29% in the second period (Table 2). The nationwide measles resurgence started with outbreaks in Calabarzon (Region 4A), Central Luzon (Region 3), the Cordillera Autonomous Region (CAR), and Western Visayas (Region 6) during the first half of 2013 and spread to many parts of Luzon and Visayas geographical divisions during October–December 2013. Outbreak response immunization activities targeting children aged 6–59 months were implemented in Calabarzon, Central Luzon, and the National Capital Region during January–February 2014; however, by that time the whole country was affected by measles outbreaks (Figure 2). After implementation of the nationwide SIA in September 2014 targeting children aged 9–59 months, 642 (37%) of the 1,719 measles cases during October–December 2014 were in persons aged ≥15 years (Table 2). The predominant measles virus genotype was D3 before 2007, then D9 and G3 during 2007–2009 (4) and D9 during 2010–2012. During 2013–2014, of 69 cases with genotyping, 68 were B3 and one was D9. Genotypes D3 and G3 have not been reported since 2005 and 2010, respectively.

Discussion

The nationwide measles resurgence in the Philippines during 2013–2014 reflected the insufficient implementation of measles elimination strategies. Persistent low vaccination coverage since 1998 combined with the relatively low level of circulation of measles virus after SIAs resulted in the accumulation of measles-susceptible cohorts of older age children and young adults and a change in the epidemiology of measles in the Philippines. The resurgence highlighted key program challenges: 1) persistent suboptimal MCV1 coverage, 2) low MCV2 coverage since introduction during 2009–2010; 3) suboptimal SIA coverage with large variations in coverage by region; 4) recent SIA target age groups too narrow to interrupt measles virus transmission among older children, evidenced by the proportion of cases occurring outside the SIA target age group; and 5) inadequate outbreak response activities before widespread measles virus transmission started. The failure to achieve high population immunity among the targeted age groups before 2013 contributed to the observed increase in the proportion of measles cases among older children and young adults that indicated a shift in the age of the measles-susceptible population from young children to a wider age group during the nationwide measles resurgence in 2013–2014. This shift will require special strategies for vaccination activities.
In June 2014, the WPR Immunization and Vaccine-Preventable Diseases Technical Advisory Group recommended that countries achieve and maintain ≥95% 2-dose MCV coverage through routine services and periodic SIAs, and, in addition, that endemic countries and countries experiencing nation-wide resurgence 1) update national plans and develop subnational plans with focus on high-risk and measles-susceptible groups; 2) enhance surveillance activities, including rapid case detection and outbreak investigation; 3) annually review and identify districts and age groups with suboptimal population immunity; and 4) increase population immunity by taking corrective actions such as periodic selective immunization activities and more frequent subnational or national SIAs (5). The Technical Advisory Group also recommended maintaining a national outbreak response plan for implementation of timely and prompt response activities.
Based on these recommendations, the Philippines Department of Health proposed new activities for measles elimination in the draft National Immunization Programme Strategic Plan for 2015–2019 (6), with plans to conduct 1) selective immunization activities§§ for children aged 12–35 months in all regions in 2015 and 2) nonselective SIAs for a wide target age group during 2015–2017 in regions with sustained measles virus transmission or identified measles susceptibility among older children and adults. In October 2014, the Department of Health issued an administrative order to strengthen local government capacity to identify measles outbreaks, plan outbreak response activities, and provide health workers with guidance on how to respond appropriately to new outbreaks and sustained measles virus transmission (7). In August 2015, the government will implement a nationwide public school-based measles-rubella-tetanus-diphtheria vaccination of 7th-grade students and establish a school entry immunization check in all public and private schools. Children with incomplete vaccination records at the time of school entry immunization check will be referred to either the school clinic or the nearest health center to receive missed vaccinations.
The findings in this report are subject to at least two limitations. First, administrative coverage data might be unreliable because of inaccurate estimates of the size of target populations and the reported number of doses delivered. Second, surveillance data underestimate the likely number of cases that occurred because not all persons with measles sought care and were reported through surveillance.
In 2013, the WPR Regional Verification Committee for Measles Elimination¶¶ verified that endemic measles virus transmission had been interrupted for a period of at least 36 months in Australia, Macao [China], Mongolia, and the Republic of Korea. However, during 2013–2014, the measles resurgence in the Philippines led to measles virus importations and increased incidence in several WPR countries including Australia and the Republic of Korea and in countries in other WHO regions*** (810). Resuming progress toward regional measles elimination goals requires sustained investments, including strengthening health systems and implementing the recommended strategies in the Philippines.
1Expanded Programme on Immunization, World Health Organization Western Pacific Regional Office, Manila, Philippines; 2World Health Organization Representative's Office, Manila, Philippines; 3National Center for Disease Prevention and Control, Department of Health, Manila, Philippines; 4Department of Immunization, Vaccines, and Biologicals, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland; 5Division of Viral Diseases, National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases; 6Global Immunization Division, Center for Global Health, CDC (Corresponding author: James L. Goodson, jgoodson@cdc.gov, 404-639-8170)

References

  1. World Health Organization, Regional Committee for the Western Pacific. Resolution WPR/RC56.R8: measles elimination, hepatitis B control, and poliomyelitis eradication. Manila, Philippines: World Health Organization; 2005. Available athttp://www2.wpro.who.int/rcm/en/archives/rc56/rc_resolutions/wpr_rc56_r08.htmExternal Web Site Icon.
  2. World Health Organization, Regional Office for the Western Pacific. Western Pacific Region measles elimination field guide. Manila, Philippines: World Health Organization; 2013.
  3. Office of the Secretary, Department of Health, Republic of the Philippines. Administrative order No.5S. 1998: implementing guidelines for the Philippines Measles Elimination Campaign. Manila, Philippines: Department of Health, Republic of the Philippines; 1998.
  4. Fuji N, Suzuki A, Saito M, et al. Interruption of the circulation of an indigenous measles genotype and the introduction of other genotypes after a mass vaccination campaign in the Philippines. J Med Virol 2011;83:1424–7.
  5. World Health Organization, Regional Office for the Western Pacific. Twenty fourth meeting of the Technical Advisory Group (TAG) on immunization and vaccine preventable diseases in the Western Pacific Region. Manila, Philippines: World Health Organization; 2015 (in press).
  6. Department of Health, Republic of the Philippines. The Philippines Immunization Programme Strategic Plan for 2015–2019 (draft). Manila, Philippines: Department of Health, Republic of the Philippines.
  7. Office of the Secretary, Department of Health, Republic of the Philippines. Administrative Order No. 2014-0039: Strengthening the capacity of LGUs in identifying potential measles outbreak and planning for appropriate response. Manila, Philippines: Department of Health, Republic of the Philippines; 2014.
  8. Takahashi T, Arima Y, Kinoshita H, et al. Ongoing increase in measles cases following importations, Japan, March 2014: times of challenge and opportunity. Western Pac Surveill Response J 2014;5:31–3.
  9. Yang TU, Kim JW, Eom HE, et al. Resurgence of measles in a country of elimination: interim assessment and current control measures in the Republic of Korea in early 2014. Int J Infect Dis 2014;33:12–4.
  10. Rota PA, Brown K, Mankertz A, et al. Global distribution of measles genotypes and measles molecular epidemiology. J Infect Dis 2011;204(Suppl 1):S514–23.


* Measles elimination is defined as the absence of endemic measles virus transmission in a defined geographical area (e.g. region or country) for ≥12 months in the presence of a well-performing surveillance system..
Measles SIAs generally are carried out using two target age ranges. An initial, nationwide catch-up SIA targets all children aged 9 months–14 years, with the goal of eliminating susceptibility to measles in the general population. Periodic follow-up SIAs then target all children born since the most recent SIA. Follow-up SIAs generally are conducted nationwide every 2–4 years and target children aged 9–59 months; their goal is to eliminate any measles susceptibility that has developed in recent birth cohorts and to protect children who did not respond to the first measles vaccination.
§ The 17 administrative regions in the Philippines include the Cordillera Autonomous Region (CAR), the National Capital Region (NCR), Region 1 (Ilocos), Region 2 (Cagayan Valley), Region 3 (Central Luzon), Region 4A (Calabarzon), Region 4B (Mimaropa) and Region 5 (Bicol) in Luzon; Region 6 (Western Visayas), Region 7 (Central Visayas), and Region 8 (Eastern Visayas) in Visayas; and Region 9 (Zamboanga Peninsula), Region 10 (Northern Mindanao), Region 11 (Davao), Region 12 (SOCCSKSARGEN), Caraga, and ARMM (Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao) in Mindanao.
MCV2 was introduced in Regions 4A, 5, 6, 7, and 12 in 2009 and introduced nationwide in 2010.
** From the end of the nationwide SIA targeting children aged 9–48 months in October 2007 until the completion of the nationwide SIA targeting children aged 9–95 months in April–May 2011.
†† From the end of the nationwide SIA in April–May 2011 until the completion of the nationwide SIA targeting children aged 9–59 months in September 2014.
§§ Selective immunization activities will be carried out for children aged 12–35 months who have not yet been fully vaccinated with 2 doses of measles-containing vaccines while nonselective SIAs will be done for any person in the target age group regardless of past vaccination history.
¶¶ In 2005, the Regional Committee for the WHO WPR established a goal for measles elimination by 2012, and a Regional Verification Committee (RVC) was established in 2013. In March 2015, the RVC verified that endemic measles virus transmission had been interrupted for a period of at least 36 months in Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, and Japan.
*** During 2013–2014, a total of 17 countries in four WHO regions reported measles virus genotype B3 in persons who had a history of recent travel to the Philippines.

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