Suppr超能文献

季节性流感疫苗

Seasonal influenza vaccines.

作者信息

Fiore Anthony E, Bridges Carolyn B, Cox Nancy J

机构信息

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Rd, NE-Atlanta, GA 30333, USA.

出版信息

Curr Top Microbiol Immunol. 2009;333:43-82. doi: 10.1007/978-3-540-92165-3_3.

Abstract

Influenza vaccines are the mainstay of efforts to reduce the substantial health burden from seasonal influenza. Inactivated influenza vaccines have been available since the 1940s and are administered via intramuscular injection. Inactivated vaccines can be given to anyone six months of age or older. Live attenuated, cold-adapted influenza vaccines (LAIV) were developed in the 1960s but were not licensed in the United States until 2003, and are administered via nasal spray. Both vaccines are trivalent preparations grown in eggs and do not contain adjuvants. LAIV is licensed for use in the United States for healthy nonpregnant persons 2-49 years of age.Influenza vaccination induces antibodies primarily against the major surface glycoproteins hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA); antibodies directed against the HA are most important for protection against illness. The immune response peaks at 2-4 weeks after one dose in primed individuals. In previously unvaccinated children <9 years of age, two doses of influenza vaccine are recommended, as some children in this age group have limited or no prior infections from circulating types and subtypes of seasonal influenza. These children require both an initial priming dose and a subsequent booster dose of vaccine to mount a protective antibody response.The most common adverse events associated with inactivated vaccines are sore arm and redness at the injection site; systemic symptoms such as fever or malaise are less commonly reported. Guillian-Barré Syndrome (GBS) was identified among approximately 1 per 100,000 recipients of the 1976 swine influenza vaccine. The risk of influenza vaccine-associated GBS from seasonal influenza vaccine is thought to be at most approximately 1-2 cases per 1 million vaccinees, based on a few studies that have found an association; other studies have found no association.The most common adverse events associated with LAIV are nasal congestion, headache, myalgias or fever. Studies of the safety of LAIV among young children suggest an increased risk of wheezing in some young children, and the vaccine is not recommended for children younger than 2 years old, ages 2-4 old with a history of recurrent wheezing or reactive airways disease, or older persons who have any medical condition that confers an increased risk of influenza-related complications.The effectiveness of influenza vaccines is related predominantly to the age and immune competence of the vaccinee and the antigenic relatedness of vaccine strains to circulating strains. Vaccine effectiveness in preventing laboratory-confirmed influenza illness when the vaccine strains are well matched to circulating strains is 70-90% in randomized, placebo-controlled trials conducted among children and young healthy adults, but is lower among elderly or immunocompromised persons. In years with a suboptimal match, vaccine benefit is likely to be lower, although the vaccine can still provide substantial benefit, especially against more severe outcomes. Live, attenuated influenza vaccines have been most extensively studied among children, and have been shown to be more effective than inactivated vaccines in several randomized controlled trials among young children.Influenza vaccination is recommended in the United States for all children six months or older, all adults 50 years or older, all persons with chronic medical conditions, and pregnant women, and contacts of these persons, including healthcare workers. The global disease burden of influenza is substantial, and the World Health Organization has indicated that member states should evaluate the cost-effectiveness of introducing influenza vaccination into national immunization programs. More research is needed to develop more effective seasonal influenza vaccines that provide long-lasting immunity and broad protection against strains that differ antigenically from vaccine viruses.

摘要

流感疫苗是减轻季节性流感带来的巨大健康负担的主要手段。自20世纪40年代以来就有灭活流感疫苗,通过肌肉注射给药。灭活疫苗可用于6个月及以上的任何人。减毒活、冷适应流感疫苗(LAIV)于20世纪60年代研发出来,但直到2003年才在美国获得许可,通过鼻喷雾给药。两种疫苗都是在鸡蛋中培养的三价制剂,不含佐剂。LAIV在美国被许可用于2至49岁的健康非孕妇。

流感疫苗接种主要诱导针对主要表面糖蛋白血凝素(HA)和神经氨酸酶(NA)的抗体;针对HA的抗体对预防疾病最为重要。在已接种过疫苗的个体中,一剂疫苗接种后2至4周免疫反应达到峰值。对于9岁以下以前未接种过疫苗的儿童,建议接种两剂流感疫苗,因为该年龄组的一些儿童对季节性流感流行的型别和亚型既往感染有限或未曾感染过。这些儿童既需要初始的基础剂量疫苗,也需要随后的加强剂量疫苗来产生保护性抗体反应。

与灭活疫苗相关的最常见不良事件是注射部位手臂酸痛和发红;较少报告发热或不适等全身症状。在1976年猪流感疫苗的每10万名接种者中约有1人出现吉兰 - 巴雷综合征(GBS)。基于一些发现有相关性的研究,季节性流感疫苗导致GBS的风险估计每100万接种者中最多约1 - 2例;其他研究未发现相关性。

与LAIV相关的最常见不良事件是鼻塞、头痛、肌痛或发热。对幼儿中LAIV安全性的研究表明,一些幼儿喘息风险增加,不建议2岁以下儿童、有反复喘息或反应性气道疾病病史的2 - 4岁儿童以及有任何增加流感相关并发症风险的医疗状况的老年人接种该疫苗。

流感疫苗的有效性主要与接种者的年龄和免疫能力以及疫苗毒株与流行毒株的抗原相关性有关。当疫苗毒株与流行毒株匹配良好时,在儿童和年轻健康成年人中进行的随机、安慰剂对照试验中,疫苗预防实验室确诊流感疾病的有效性为70% - 90%,但在老年人或免疫功能低下者中较低。在匹配不佳的年份,疫苗的益处可能较低,尽管疫苗仍能提供显著益处,尤其是预防更严重的后果。减毒活流感疫苗在儿童中研究最为广泛,并且在一些针对幼儿的随机对照试验中已显示比灭活疫苗更有效。

在美国,建议所有6个月及以上的儿童、所有50岁及以上的成年人、所有患有慢性疾病的人、孕妇以及这些人的密切接触者,包括医护人员接种流感疫苗。流感的全球疾病负担很重,世界卫生组织已表明成员国应评估将流感疫苗接种纳入国家免疫规划的成本效益。需要开展更多研究来研发更有效的季节性流感疫苗,以提供持久免疫力并对与疫苗病毒抗原不同的毒株提供广泛保护。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验