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Factors associated with humoral immune response in older adults who received egg-free influenza vaccine.

Authors :
Williams, Katherine V.
Moehling Geffel, Krissy
Alcorn, John F.
Patricia Nowalk, Mary
Levine, Min Z.
Kim, Sara S.
Flannery, Brendan
Susick, Michael
Zimmerman, Richard K.
Source :
Vaccine. Jan2023, Vol. 41 Issue 3, p862-869. 8p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

• Age and baseline HAI titers were associated with immune response to egg-free influenza vaccine. • HAI response differed by antigen level contained in prior season's influenza vaccine. • The ideal sequence of vaccine formulations across influenza seasons remains unknown. Immune responses to influenza vaccination tend to be lower among older, frequently vaccinated adults. Use of egg-free influenza vaccines is increasing, but limited data exist on factors associated with their immunogenicity in older adults. Community-dwelling older adults ≥ 56 years of age were enrolled in a prospective, observational study of immunogenicity of 2018–2019 influenza vaccine. Hemagglutination inhibition (HAI) antibody titers were measured pre-vaccination (Day 0) and four weeks after vaccination (Day 28) to calculate geometric mean titers, seropositivity (HAI titers ≥ 1:40), seroconversion (fourfold rise in HAI titer with post-vaccination titer ≥ 1:40) and geometric mean fold rise (GMFR). Linear regression models assessed the association of predictors of GMFR for each vaccine antigen. Among 91 participants who received egg-free influenza vaccines, 84 (92.3 %) received quadrivalent recombinant influenza vaccine (RIV4, Flublok, Sanofi Pasteur), and 7 (7.7 %) received quadrivalent cell culture-based influenza vaccine (ccIIV4, Flucelvax, Seqirus). Pre-vaccination seropositivity was 52.8 % for A(H1N1), 94.5 % for A(H3N2), 61.5 % for B/Colorado and 48.4 % for B/Phuket. Seroconversion by antigen ranged from 16.5 % for A(H1N1) and B/Colorado to 37.4 % for A(H3N2); 40 participants failed to seroconvert to any antigen. Factors independently associated with higher GMFR in multivariable models included lower pre-vaccination HAI antibody titer for A(H1N1), B/Colorado and B/Phuket, and younger age for A(H1N1). Overall pre-vaccination seropositivity was high and just over half of the cohort seroconverted to ≥ 1 vaccine antigen. Antibody responses were highest among participants with lower pre-vaccination titers. Among older adults with high pre-existing antibody titers, approaches to improve immune responses are needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0264410X
Volume :
41
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Vaccine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
161079543
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2022.12.041