Bandim Health Project, Bissau, Guinea-Bissau.
Bandim Health Project, OPEN, Department of Clinical Research, Odense University Hospital, Odense, Denmark.
Nat Rev Immunol. 2020 Aug;20(8):464-470. doi: 10.1038/s41577-020-0338-x. Epub 2020 May 27.
The textbook view of vaccination is that it functions to induce immune memory of the specific pathogen components of the vaccine, leading to a quantitatively and qualitatively better response if the host is exposed to infection with the same pathogen. However, evidence accumulated over the past few decades increasingly suggests that vaccines can also have non-specific effects on unrelated infections and diseases, with important implications for childhood mortality particularly in low-income settings. Furthermore, many of these non-specific effects, as well as the pathogen-specific effects, of vaccines show differences between the sexes. Here, members of the Optimmunize consortium discuss the evidence for and potential mechanisms of non-specific and sex-differential effects of vaccines, as well as their potential policy implications. Given that the non-specific effects of some vaccines are now being tested for their ability to protect against COVID-19, the authors also comment on the broader implications of these trials.
从教科书的角度来看,疫苗的作用是诱导宿主对疫苗中特定病原体成分产生免疫记忆,如果宿主接触到相同病原体的感染,就会产生数量和质量上更好的反应。然而,过去几十年积累的证据越来越表明,疫苗也可以对不相关的感染和疾病产生非特异性影响,这对特别是在低收入环境中的儿童死亡率有重要影响。此外,疫苗的这些非特异性效应以及病原体特异性效应在性别之间存在差异。在这里,Optimmunize 联盟的成员讨论了疫苗的非特异性和性别差异效应的证据和潜在机制,以及它们可能产生的政策影响。鉴于一些疫苗的非特异性效应现在正在测试其预防 COVID-19 的能力,作者还评论了这些试验的更广泛影响。