McDade Thomas W, Borja Judith B, Kuzawa Christopher W, Perez Tita Lorna L, Adair Linda S
Department of Anthropology, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 60208, United States; Cells to Society (C2S): The Center on Social Disparities and Health, Institute for Policy Research, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 60208, United States.
Office of Population Studies Foundation and Department of Nutrition and Dietetics, University of San Carlos, Cebu City, Philippines.
Vaccine. 2015 Apr 21;33(17):2004-8. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2015.03.019. Epub 2015 Mar 18.
C-reactive protein (CRP) is increasingly measured as a marker of systemic inflammation that predicts elevated risk for cardiovascular disease. Influenza vaccination is a mild pro-inflammatory stimulus, and the CRP response to vaccination may provide additional information on individual differences in inflammatory response and risk for disease.
To document the pattern of CRP response to influenza vaccination among a large sample of older women in the Philippines. The Philippines exemplifies current global trends toward increasing rates of overweight/obesity, but also maintains relatively high rates of infectious disease. The secondary aim of the study is to investigate the impact of infectious symptoms on the pattern of response to vaccination.
A community-based sample of 934 women (mean age=55.4 years) received the influenza vaccine. CRP was assessed at baseline and 72h post-vaccination. Descriptive, non-parametric, and parametric analyses were implemented to assess the magnitude of CRP response, and to investigate whether responses were associated with baseline CRP or the presence of infectious symptoms prior to vaccination.
Influenza vaccination resulted in a statistically significant CRP response of 0.35mg/L (p<0.001), representing a 30.2% increase from baseline. For individuals with symptoms of infectious disease at baseline, the CRP response was smaller (12.9%) and not statistically significant (p=0.77). Lower CRP at baseline was associated with larger CRP response to vaccination in the entire sample, and among participants without recent symptoms of infection.
Influenza vaccination produces a mild CRP response in the Philippines. This study extends prior research in US and European populations validating influenza vaccination as an in vivo model for investigating the dynamics of inflammation, but also raises potential complications in settings where rates of infectious disease are elevated.
C反应蛋白(CRP)越来越多地被作为全身炎症的标志物进行检测,它可预测心血管疾病风险升高。流感疫苗接种是一种轻度的促炎刺激,接种疫苗后CRP的反应可能会提供有关炎症反应个体差异和疾病风险的更多信息。
记录菲律宾大量老年女性接种流感疫苗后CRP的反应模式。菲律宾体现了当前全球超重/肥胖率上升的趋势,但传染病发病率也相对较高。该研究的次要目的是调查感染症状对疫苗接种反应模式的影响。
934名女性(平均年龄=55.4岁)的社区样本接受了流感疫苗接种。在基线和接种疫苗后72小时评估CRP。采用描述性、非参数和参数分析来评估CRP反应的幅度,并调查反应是否与基线CRP或接种疫苗前感染症状的存在有关。
流感疫苗接种导致CRP反应在统计学上显著升高0.35mg/L(p<0.001),较基线增加30.2%。对于基线时有传染病症状的个体,CRP反应较小(12.9%)且无统计学意义(p=0.77)。在整个样本以及近期无感染症状的参与者中,基线时较低的CRP与接种疫苗后较大的CRP反应相关。
在菲律宾,流感疫苗接种会产生轻度的CRP反应。本研究扩展了此前在美国和欧洲人群中的研究,验证了流感疫苗接种作为研究炎症动态的体内模型,但同时也在传染病发病率较高的环境中引发了潜在并发症。