Cincinnati Children's Hospital and Medical Center, Division of Infectious Diseases, Global Health Center, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2013 Aug 14;8(8):e70867. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0070867. eCollection 2013.
Antenatal immunization of mothers with influenza vaccine increases serum antibodies and reduces the rates of influenza illness in mothers and their infants. We report the effect of antenatal immunization on the levels of specific anti-influenza IgA levels in human breast milk. (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT00142389; http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00142389).
The Mother's Gift study was a prospective, blinded, randomized controlled trial that assigned 340 pregnant Bangladeshi mothers to receive either trivalent inactivated influenza vaccine, or 23-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine during the third trimester. We evaluated breast milk at birth, 6 weeks, 6 months, and 12 months, and serum at 10 weeks and 12 months. Milk and serum specimens from 57 subjects were assayed for specific IgA antibody to influenza A/New Caledonia (H1N1) using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and a virus neutralization assay, and for total IgA using ELISA. Influenza-specific IgA levels in breast milk were significantly higher in influenza vaccinees than in pneumococcal controls for at least 6 months postpartum (p = 0.04). Geometric mean concentrations ranged from 8.0 to 91.1 ELISA units/ml in vaccinees, versus 2.3 to 13.7 ELISA units/mL in controls. Virus neutralization titers in milk were 1.2 to 3 fold greater in vaccinees, and correlated with influenza-specific IgA levels (r = 0.86). Greater exclusivity of breastfeeding in the first 6 months of life significantly decreased the expected number of respiratory illness with fever episodes in infants of influenza-vaccinated mothers (p = 0.0042) but not in infants of pneumococcal-vaccinated mothers (p = 0.4154).
The sustained high levels of actively produced anti-influenza IgA in breast milk and the decreased infant episodes of respiratory illness with fever suggest that breastfeeding may provide local mucosal protection for the infant for at least 6 months. Studies are needed to determine the cellular and immunologic mechanisms of breast milk-mediated protection after antepartum immunization.
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00142389.
对孕妇进行产前流感疫苗免疫可增加血清抗体,并降低母亲及其婴儿患流感的几率。我们报告了产前免疫对人乳中特定抗流感 IgA 水平的影响。(临床试验.gov 标识符 NCT00142389; http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00142389)。
母亲的礼物研究是一项前瞻性、盲法、随机对照试验,将 340 名孟加拉国孕妇随机分配接受三价灭活流感疫苗或 23 价肺炎球菌多糖疫苗在妊娠晚期。我们评估了出生时、6 周、6 个月和 12 个月的母乳以及 10 周和 12 个月的血清。使用酶联免疫吸附试验(ELISA)和病毒中和试验检测 57 例标本中针对流感 A/新喀里多尼亚(H1N1)的特异性 IgA 抗体,以及使用 ELISA 检测总 IgA。产后至少 6 个月,流感疫苗组的母乳中流感特异性 IgA 水平明显高于肺炎球菌对照组(p=0.04)。几何平均浓度范围为 8.0 至 91.1 ELISA 单位/ml 在疫苗组,而对照组为 2.3 至 13.7 ELISA 单位/ml。疫苗组的病毒中和滴度在牛奶中增加了 1.2 至 3 倍,与流感特异性 IgA 水平相关(r=0.86)。生命头 6 个月内更专一的母乳喂养显著减少了流感疫苗母亲婴儿的发热性呼吸道疾病的预期发作次数(p=0.0042),但对肺炎球菌疫苗母亲的婴儿没有影响(p=0.4154)。
母乳中持续高水平的主动产生的抗流感 IgA 以及发热性呼吸道疾病婴儿发作次数减少表明,母乳喂养至少可以为婴儿提供 6 个月的局部黏膜保护。需要研究来确定产前免疫后母乳介导保护的细胞和免疫机制。
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00142389。