Martin Dominique E, Cadar Andreia N, Panier Hunter, Torrance Blake L, Kuchel George A, Bartley Jenna M
UConn Center On Aging, University of Connecticut School of Medicine, 263 Farmington Avenue, Farmington, CT, 06030, 860-679-8322, USA.
Department of Immunology, University of Connecticut School of Medicine, 263 Farmington Avenue, Farmington, CT, 06030, 860-679-8322, USA.
Immun Ageing. 2023 May 2;20(1):18. doi: 10.1186/s12979-023-00343-x.
Aging is associated with progressive declines in immune responses leading to increased risk of severe infection and diminished vaccination responses. Influenza (flu) is a leading killer of older adults despite availability of seasonal vaccines. Geroscience-guided interventions targeting biological aging could offer transformational approaches to reverse broad declines in immune responses with aging. Here, we evaluated effects of metformin, an FDA approved diabetes drug and candidate anti-aging drug, on flu vaccination responses and markers of immunological resilience in a pilot and feasibility double-blinded placebo-controlled study.
Healthy older adults (non-diabetic/non-prediabetic, age: 74.4 ± 1.7 years) were randomized to metformin (n = 8, 1500 mg extended release/daily) or placebo (n = 7) treatment for 20 weeks and were vaccinated with high-dose flu vaccine after 10 weeks of treatment. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), serum, and plasma were collected prior to treatment, immediately prior to vaccination, and 1, 5, and 10 weeks post vaccination. Increased serum antibody titers were observed post vaccination with no significant differences between groups. Metformin treatment led to trending increases in circulating T follicular helper cells post-vaccination. Furthermore, 20 weeks of metformin treatment reduced expression of exhaustion marker CD57 in circulating CD4 T cells.
Pre-vaccination metformin treatment improved some components of flu vaccine responses and reduced some markers of T cell exhaustion without serious adverse events in nondiabetic older adults. Thus, our findings highlight the potential utility of metformin to improve flu vaccine responses and reduce age-related immune exhaustion in older adults, providing improved immunological resilience in nondiabetic older adults.
衰老与免疫反应的逐渐衰退相关,导致严重感染风险增加和疫苗接种反应减弱。尽管有季节性疫苗,但流感仍是老年人的主要杀手。以老年科学为指导的针对生物衰老的干预措施可能提供变革性方法,以扭转衰老过程中免疫反应的广泛衰退。在此,我们在一项试点和可行性双盲安慰剂对照研究中,评估了美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)批准的糖尿病药物及候选抗衰老药物二甲双胍对流感疫苗接种反应和免疫恢复力标志物的影响。
健康老年人(非糖尿病/非糖尿病前期,年龄:74.4±1.7岁)被随机分为二甲双胍组(n = 8,每日1500毫克缓释片)或安慰剂组(n = 7),治疗20周,并在治疗10周后接种高剂量流感疫苗。在治疗前、接种疫苗前即刻、接种疫苗后1、5和10周采集外周血单核细胞(PBMC)、血清和血浆。接种疫苗后观察到血清抗体滴度升高,两组间无显著差异。二甲双胍治疗导致接种疫苗后循环滤泡辅助性T细胞呈上升趋势。此外,20周的二甲双胍治疗降低了循环CD4 T细胞中耗竭标志物CD57的表达。
在非糖尿病老年人中,接种疫苗前使用二甲双胍治疗改善了流感疫苗反应的一些成分,并降低了一些T细胞耗竭标志物,且无严重不良事件。因此,我们的研究结果突出了二甲双胍在改善老年人流感疫苗反应和减少与年龄相关的免疫耗竭方面的潜在效用,为非糖尿病老年人提供了更好的免疫恢复力。