Duke Human Vaccine Institute, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, United States of America.
Department of Pathology, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina, United States of America.
PLoS Pathog. 2020 Nov 19;16(11):e1009010. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1009010. eCollection 2020 Nov.
Rotavirus (RV) vaccine efficacy is significantly reduced in lower- and middle-income countries (LMICs) compared to high-income countries. This review summarizes current research into the mechanisms behind this phenomenon, with a particular focus on the evidence that maternal antibody (matAb) interference is a contributing factor to this disparity. All RV vaccines currently in use are orally administered, live-attenuated virus vaccines that replicate in the infant gut, which leaves their efficacy potentially impacted by both placentally transferred immunoglobulin G (IgG) and mucosal IgA Abs conferred via breast milk. Observational studies of cohorts in LMICs demonstrated an inverse correlation between matAb titers, both in serum and breast milk, and infant responses to RV vaccination. However, a causal link between maternal humoral immunity and reduced RV vaccine efficacy in infants has yet to be definitively established, partially due to limitations in current animal models of RV disease. The characteristics of Abs mediating interference and the mechanism(s) involved have yet to be determined, and these may differ from mechanisms of matAb interference for parenterally administered vaccines due to the contribution of mucosal immunity conferred via breast milk. Increased vaccine doses and later age of vaccine administration have been strategies applied to overcome matAb interference, but these approaches are difficult to safely implement in the setting of RV vaccination in LMICs. Ultimately, the development of relevant animal models of matAb interference is needed to determine what alternative approaches or vaccine designs can safely and effectively overcome matAb interference of infant RV vaccination.
轮状病毒(RV)疫苗在低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)的功效明显低于高收入国家。本综述总结了目前对这一现象背后机制的研究,特别关注了母体抗体(matAb)干扰是造成这种差异的一个因素的证据。目前所有使用的 RV 疫苗都是口服、减毒活病毒疫苗,在婴儿肠道内复制,这使得它们的功效可能受到胎盘转移的免疫球蛋白 G(IgG)和通过母乳获得的黏膜 IgA Abs 的影响。在 LMICs 队列的观察性研究中,发现血清和母乳中的 matAb 滴度与婴儿对 RV 疫苗接种的反应呈反比关系。然而,母体体液免疫与婴儿 RV 疫苗效力降低之间的因果关系尚未得到明确确立,部分原因是目前用于 RV 疾病的动物模型存在局限性。介导干扰的 Abs 的特征和涉及的机制尚未确定,并且由于母乳提供的黏膜免疫的贡献,这些可能与通过肌肉注射给予的疫苗的 matAb 干扰的机制不同。增加疫苗剂量和延迟疫苗接种年龄是克服 matAb 干扰的策略,但在 RV 疫苗接种的 LMICs 环境中,这些方法难以安全实施。最终,需要开发相关的 matAb 干扰动物模型,以确定哪些替代方法或疫苗设计可以安全有效地克服婴儿 RV 疫苗接种的 matAb 干扰。