Yanny Beshoy, Konyn Peter, Najarian Lisa M, Mitry Amanda, Saab Sammy
Dr Yanny is a health science clinical instructor of medicine and Mr Konyn is a medical student in the Department of Medicine at the University of California at Los Angeles in Los Angeles, California. Ms Najarian is a premedical student in the Department of Surgery at the University of California at Los Angeles. Ms Mitry is a graduate student at Claremont Graduate University in Riverside, California.
Dr Saab is a professor in the Departments of Surgery and Medicine at the University of California at Los Angeles.
Gastroenterol Hepatol (N Y). 2019 Feb;15(2):93-99.
Despite the availability of hepatitis B virus (HBV) vaccination, HBV remains a cause of significant morbidity and mortality around the world. Immunologic response and the development of immunity to the HBV vaccine vary significantly among patients. Multiple studies have looked at patients who are at risk of nonresponse and have offered their own approaches to patients who do not respond. This article reviews the best approaches to HBV vaccine nonresponse. We searched the PubMed database for all articles on HBV vaccination response from 1981 to January 2018. Recommended and tested approaches to nonresponse were identified. A total of 71 adequate-quality studies with 2354 patients were identified. Repeat vaccination with the same dose increased immunologic seroconversion in 85.7% of patients who previously reported nonresponse and in over 80% of patients with end-stage renal disease, HIV infection, hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, advanced age, hypoalbuminemia, liver cirrhosis, and hemodialysis (HD) dependence. Patients with inflammatory bowel disease, celiac disease, and diabetes had a milder response (67.5%). Increasing the vaccination dose to 40 µg improved seroconversion in HIV-infected, HCV-infected, and HD patients of initial nonresponse. The use of a subcutaneous injection route increased response by 12% in patients infected with HIV. Patients not responding to an initial vaccine series and not actively infected with HBV benefited from reimmunization by repeating the vaccine series or receiving a single-dose vaccine booster. Although the overall response rate was approximately 90% of previous nonresponders, the rate varied among the populations studied.
尽管有乙肝病毒(HBV)疫苗可用,但HBV在全球范围内仍是导致严重发病和死亡的原因。患者对HBV疫苗的免疫反应和免疫发展差异很大。多项研究关注了无反应风险的患者,并为无反应的患者提供了各自的方法。本文综述了应对HBV疫苗无反应的最佳方法。我们在PubMed数据库中搜索了1981年至2018年1月期间所有关于HBV疫苗接种反应的文章。确定了针对无反应的推荐和经过测试的方法。共确定了71项质量足够的研究,涉及2354名患者。用相同剂量重复接种疫苗,使先前报告无反应的患者中85.7%以及超过80%的终末期肾病、HIV感染、丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)感染、高龄、低白蛋白血症、肝硬化和依赖血液透析(HD)的患者实现了免疫血清转化。患有炎症性肠病、乳糜泻和糖尿病的患者反应较轻微(67.5%)。将接种剂量增加到40μg可提高初始无反应的HIV感染、HCV感染和HD患者的血清转化率。皮下注射途径的使用使HIV感染患者的反应率提高了12%。对初始疫苗系列无反应且未被HBV主动感染的患者,通过重复疫苗系列或接受单剂量疫苗加强免疫进行再次免疫可从中受益。尽管总体反应率约为先前无反应者的90%,但该率在不同研究人群中有所不同。