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Systematic review of the evidence on the epidemiology of herpes zoster: incidence in the general population and specific subpopulations in Spain.

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OBJECTIVES Herpes zoster (HZ) is an important cause of morbidity around the world, especially among the adult population aged >50 years. STUDY DESIGN A systematic review of the literature (up… Click to show full abstract

OBJECTIVES Herpes zoster (HZ) is an important cause of morbidity around the world, especially among the adult population aged >50 years. STUDY DESIGN A systematic review of the literature (up to October 31, 2016) was performed to identify available evidence on incidence of HZ in the general population and in a specific subpopulation in Spain. METHODS PubMed and Embase databases were searched, combining the following search terms: 'herpes zoster', 'diabetes mellitus (DM)', 'chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)', 'chronic heart failure', 'mental disorders' and 'immunocompromised'. Supplements for local scientific congresses, non-indexed Spanish journals and official epidemiological reports, potentially HZ related, were also manually searched. The inclusion criteria were the following: English or Spanish publications reporting incidence of HZ in the Spanish general population and/or specific subpopulations. No restrictions were applied on the study design or population age. RESULTS Among 269 references retrieved (48 PubMed, 148 Embase and 73 manual searching), 34 were finally included. Incidence of HZ in the general population ranged from 2.1 to 5.5/1000 person-years. HZ incidence ranged from 9.4 to 15.3/1000 patients with DM and from 11.0 to 11.4/1000 population with COPD or cardiovascular disease. In asthmatic patients, 6.9 HZ cases/1000 subjects were reported. The highest HZ incidence (1.3-400.0/1000 person-years) was in immunocompromised persons (10.0/1000 patients with cancer, 12.5/1000 patients with AIDS, from 5.0 to 240.0/1000 transplanted patients and from 6.6 to 27.0/1000 population with rheumatic diseases). Three studies estimated an increased risk of HZ in comparison with general population, for patients with DM (24%), COPD (39%) and COPD receiving inhaled corticosteroids (61%). CONCLUSIONS The results suggest a high risk of HZ in certain age groups and specific subpopulations. This study could contribute to identify target age populations and at-risk groups if implementation of HZ vaccination programmes in Spain would be considered.

Keywords: general population; herpes zoster; incidence general; epidemiology; population specific; population

Journal Title: Public health
Year Published: 2019

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