Pregnancy-related immune suppression leads to altered influenza vaccine recall responses.
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ID: 28153
2019
Pregnancy is a risk factor for severe influenza infection. Despite achieving seroprotective antibody titres post immunisation fewer pregnant women experience a reduction in influenza-like illness compared to non-pregnant cohorts. This may be due to the effects that immune-modulation in pregnancy has on vaccine efficacy leading to a less favourable immunologic response. To understand this, we investigated the antigen-specific cellular responses and leukocyte phenotype in pregnant and non-pregnant women who achieved seroprotection post immunisation. We show that although pregnancy is associated with better antigen-specific inflammatory (IFN-γ) responses and an expansion of central memory T cells (Tcm) post immunisation, but low-level pregnancy-related immune regulation (HLA-G, PIBF) and associated reduced B-cell antibody maintenance (TGF-β) suggest poor immunologic responses compared to the non-pregnant. Thus far, studies of influenza vaccine immunogenicity have focused on the induction of antibodies but understanding additional vaccine-related cellular responses is needed to fully appreciate how pregnancy impacts on vaccine effectiveness.
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shah2019pregnancyrelatedclinical
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Authors | Shah, Nishel M;Imami, Nesrina;Kelleher, Peter;Barclay, Wendy S;Johnson, Mark R; |
Journal | clinical immunology (orlando, fla) |
Year | 2019 |
DOI | S1521-6616(19)30213-X |
URL | |
Keywords | Keywords not found |
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