Plant Ewan P, Eick-Cost Angelia A, Ezzeldin Hussein, Sanchez Jose L, Ye Zhiping, Cooper Michael J
Division of Viral Products, Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, US Food and Drug Administration, Silver Spring, MD 20903, USA.
Armed Forces Health Surveillance Branch, Public Health Division, J3/CSA, Defense Health Agency, and Cherokee Nation Technology Solutions, Silver Spring, MD 20904, USA.
Vaccines (Basel). 2018 Jul 3;6(3):39. doi: 10.3390/vaccines6030039.
The first exposure to influenza is thought to impact subsequent immune responses later in life. The consequences of this can be seen during influenza epidemics and pandemics with differences in morbidity and mortality for different birth cohorts. There is a need for better understanding of how vaccine responses are affected by early exposures to influenza viruses. In this analysis of hemagglutination inhibition (HI) antibody responses in two cohorts of military personnel we noticed differences related to age, sex, prior vaccination, deployment and birth year. These data suggest that HI antibody production, in response to influenza vaccination, is affected by these factors. The magnitude of this antibody response is associated with, among other factors, the influenza strain that circulated following birth.
首次接触流感被认为会影响日后生活中的后续免疫反应。在流感流行和大流行期间,不同出生队列在发病率和死亡率上存在差异,这一现象的后果便可见一斑。有必要更好地了解早期接触流感病毒如何影响疫苗反应。在对两组军事人员的血凝抑制(HI)抗体反应进行的分析中,我们注意到与年龄、性别、既往接种疫苗情况、部署和出生年份有关的差异。这些数据表明,针对流感疫苗接种产生的HI抗体受这些因素影响。除其他因素外,这种抗体反应的强度与出生后流行的流感毒株有关。