Department of Epidemiology, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Department of Immunology and Infectious Diseases, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Eur J Epidemiol. 2021 Jul;36(7):753-762. doi: 10.1007/s10654-021-00767-z. Epub 2021 Jun 12.
The Human Immunomics Initiative (HII), a joint project between the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and the Human Vaccines Project (HVP), focuses on studying immunity and the predictability of immuneresponsiveness to vaccines in aging populations. This paper describes the hypotheses and methodological approaches of this new collaborative initiative. Central to our thinking is the idea that predictors of age-related non-communicable diseases are the same as predictors for infectious diseases like COVID-19 and influenza. Fundamental to our approach is to differentiate between chronological, biological and immune age, and to use existing large-scale population cohorts. The latter provide well-typed phenotypic data on individuals' health status over time, readouts of routine clinical biochemical biomarkers to determine biological age, and bio-banked plasma samples to deep phenotype humoral immune responses as biomarkers of immune age. The first phase of the program involves 1. the exploration of biological age, humoral biomarkers of immune age, and genetics in a large multigenerational cohort, and 2. the subsequent development of models of immunity in relation to health status in a second, prospective cohort of an aging population. In the second phase, vaccine responses and efficacy of licensed COVID-19 vaccines in the presence and absence of influenza-, pneumococcal- and pertussis vaccines routinely offered to elderly, will be studied in older aged participants of prospective population-based cohorts in different geographical locations who will be selected for representing distinct biological and immune ages. The HII research program is aimed at relating vaccine responsiveness to biological and immune age, and identifying aging-related pathways crucial to enhance vaccine effectiveness in aging populations.
人类免疫组学计划(HII)是哈佛 T.H.陈公共卫生学院与人类疫苗计划(HVP)之间的联合项目,专注于研究衰老人群中的免疫和疫苗免疫反应的可预测性。本文描述了这一新合作计划的假设和方法学方法。我们的核心思想是,与 COVID-19 和流感等传染病相关的预测因子与与年龄相关的非传染性疾病的预测因子相同。我们方法的基础是区分年龄、生物和免疫年龄,并利用现有的大规模人群队列。后者为个体健康状况随时间的变化提供了经过良好分型的表型数据、确定生物年龄的常规临床生化生物标志物的读数,以及用于深入表型体液免疫反应的生物银行血浆样本,作为免疫年龄的生物标志物。该计划的第一阶段包括:1. 在一个大型多代队列中探索生物年龄、免疫年龄的体液生物标志物和遗传学;2. 随后在第二个老龄化人群的前瞻性队列中开发与健康状况相关的免疫模型。在第二阶段,将在常规为老年人提供的流感、肺炎球菌和百日咳疫苗存在和不存在的情况下,研究不同地理位置的前瞻性基于人群队列中年龄较大的参与者对授权 COVID-19 疫苗的反应和疗效,这些参与者将根据不同的生物和免疫年龄进行选择。HII 研究计划旨在将疫苗反应与生物和免疫年龄相关联,并确定与衰老相关的关键途径,以增强衰老人群中疫苗的有效性。