Centre for Immunization Readiness, Public Health Agency of Canada, Ottawa, Canada; Department of Microbiology, Infectious Diseases, and Immunology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Montreal, Canada.
Centre for Immunization Readiness, Public Health Agency of Canada, Ottawa, Canada.
Vaccine. 2023 Jul 12;41(31):4462-4471. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2023.06.038. Epub 2023 Jun 16.
Recently, studies have suggested that influenza antibody titers decline with time since vaccination. Duration of vaccine protection is an important factor to determine the optimal timing of vaccination.
We aimed to systematically evaluate the implication of waning immunity on the duration of seasonal influenza vaccine antibody response.
Electronic databases and clinical trial registries were systematically searched to identify phase III/IV randomized clinical trials evaluating the immunogenicity of seasonal influenza vaccines measured by hemagglutination inhibition assay in healthy individuals six months of age and older. Meta-analyses were conducted to compare adjuvanted and standard influenza vaccine responses with time since vaccination.
1918 articles were identified, of which ten were included in qualitative synthesis and seven in quantitative analysis (children; n=3, older adults; n=4). All studies were deemed to be at low risk of bias, except one study deemed at high risk of bias due to missing outcome data. The majority of included studies found a rise in antibody titers at one-month followed by a decline at six-month post-vaccination. At six-months post-vaccination overall risk differences in seroprotection were significantly higher for children vaccinated with adjuvanted compared to standard vaccines (0.29; 95 % confidence interval (CI), 0.14-0.44). A small increase in seroprotection levels was observed among older adults vaccinated with an adjuvanted compared to standard vaccines, which remained constant over six-months (pre-vaccination: 0.03; 95 % CI, 0.00-0.09 and one- and six-months post-vaccination: 0.05; 95 % CI, 0.01-0.09).
Our results found evidence of persistent antibody responses following influenza vaccination over the course of a typical influenza season. Even if influenza vaccine responses wane over a six-month period, vaccination likely still provides a significant advantage in protection, which may be enhanced with adjuvanted vaccines, particularly in children. Further research is needed to identify the exact timing when the decline in antibody response begins to better inform the optimal timing of influenza vaccination programs.
PROSPERO (CRD42019138585).
最近的研究表明,流感抗体滴度随接种疫苗后的时间推移而下降。疫苗保护持续时间是决定流感疫苗最佳接种时间的重要因素。
我们旨在系统评估免疫减弱对季节性流感疫苗抗体反应持续时间的影响。
系统检索电子数据库和临床试验注册中心,以确定评估健康人群(年龄≥6 个月)接种季节性流感疫苗后血凝抑制抗体效价的 III/IV 期随机临床试验。进行荟萃分析以比较佐剂和标准流感疫苗随接种时间的反应。
共确定了 1918 篇文章,其中 10 篇进行定性综合分析,7 篇进行定量分析(儿童;n=3,老年人;n=4)。除一项因缺失结局数据而被认为高偏倚风险的研究外,所有研究均被认为低偏倚风险。大多数纳入的研究发现,接种后 1 个月抗体滴度升高,6 个月后下降。在 6 个月时,与标准疫苗相比,儿童接种佐剂疫苗的总体血清保护差异显著更高(0.29;95%置信区间[CI],0.14-0.44)。与标准疫苗相比,接种佐剂疫苗的老年人血清保护水平略有增加,且在 6 个月内保持不变(接种前:0.03;95%CI,0.00-0.09 和接种后 1 个月和 6 个月:0.05;95%CI,0.01-0.09)。
我们的研究结果发现,在典型的流感季节中,流感疫苗接种后仍存在持续的抗体反应。即使在 6 个月的时间内,流感疫苗的反应减弱,但接种疫苗仍可能提供显著的保护优势,特别是在儿童中,佐剂疫苗可能会增强这种优势。需要进一步研究以确定抗体反应下降开始的确切时间,以便更好地为流感疫苗接种计划的最佳时间提供信息。
PROSPERO(CRD42019138585)。