| Literature DB >> 20814575 |
Mark I Chen1, Ian G Barr, Gerald C H Koh, Vernon J Lee, Caroline P S Lee, Robert Shaw, Cui Lin, Jonathan Yap, Alex R Cook, Boon Huan Tan, Jin Phang Loh, Timothy Barkham, Vincent T K Chow, Raymond T P Lin, Yee-Sin Leo.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We describe the serological response following H1N1-2009 influenza A infections confirmed by reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). METHODOLOGY AND PRINCIPALEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20814575 PMCID: PMC2930007 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0012474
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Characteristics of study participants (N = 118).
| Participant characteristics | ||
| Source | Hospitalized cases | 67 (57) |
| Seroincidence cohort | 28 (24) | |
| Outbreak cases | 23 (19) | |
| Age distribution in years | Median (range) | 25 (19–62) |
| <20 years | 8 (7) | |
| 20–34 years | 73 (62) | |
| 35–49 years | 19 (16) | |
| ≥50 years | 18 (15) | |
| Gender | Male | 84 (71) |
| Female | 34 (29) | |
| Co-morbid conditions | Asthma or bronchitis | 14 (12) |
| Hypertension or dyslipidemia | 9 (8) | |
| Cardiovascular disease | 2 (2) | |
| Diabetes mellitus | 4 (3) | |
| Cancer and immunological disorders | 8 (7) | |
| Oseltamivir treatment | Yes | 90 (76) |
| No | 23 (19) | |
| Unknown | 5 (4) | |
| Onset to oseltamivir treatment | Timing unknown | 9 (10) |
| 2 days or less | 46 (51) | |
| 3 or more days | 35 (39) | |
| Number of samples | Median (range) | 2 (1–7) |
| One | 28 (24) | |
| Two | 46 (39) | |
| Three or more | 44 (37) | |
NB: Unless otherwise stated, data presented are number of participants with percentages in brackets.
*Hodgkin's lymphoma in remission, leukemia in remission, breast cancer on tamoxifen, human immunodeficiency virus infection on antiviral treatment, sarcoidosis, rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, long-term prednisolone therapy for unspecified endocrine disorder.
As % of subjects who received oseltamivir treatment.
Detailed breakdown on sources of study participants and samples.
| Hospitalized cases | Sero-incidence cohort | Outbreak cases | Total | ||
| All participants | No. of participants | 67 (57) | 28 | 23 | 118 (100) |
| No. of samples | 148 (55) | 76 (28) | 43 (16) | 267 (100) | |
| Two or more samples | No. of participants | 45 (50) | 28 (31) | 17 (19) | 90 (100) |
| No. of samples | 126 (53) | 76 (32) | 37 (15) | 239 (100) |
NB: Numbers in brackets are row percentages.
25 military personnel and 3 hospital staff from Tan Tock Seng Hospital.
15 participants from military outbreaks and 8 from the long-term care facility outbreak.
Figure 1Hemagglutination inhibition titers by time from illness onset to sample collection.
Includes 267 samples from 118 individuals. Samples taken before onset in sero-incidence cohort participants are grouped (as <0* days), as are those taken after 70 days (≥70 days), with other observations summarized in 5 day intervals up to 29 days, 10 day intervals from 30 to 69 days. The number of samples in each interval is in brackets; intervals marked with # include 7 samples from the 3 individuals whose date of positive PCR test was used instead of onset dates: <0 (2 samples), 20 to 24 (1 sample), 40 to 49 (2 samples) and ≥70 (2 samples). Colored stacked bars give the proportion with titers of 10, 20, 40 and ≥80 while the line denotes the geometric mean titer with error bars depicting 95% confidence intervals. The upper limit is off the scale for days 10–14 (518) and days 30–39 (356).
Figure 2Seroconversion on hemagglutination inhibition assay, by timing of sample collection.
Titers between baseline and follow-up (FU) sample is compared, for all participants regardless of time from onset to follow-up sample (n = 90), and restricting to participants whose follow-up sample was taken 15 or more days after onset (n = 68), with error bars depicting 95% confidence intervals; columns of different colors depict different cut-off points for time from onset to baseline sample. Seroconversion was defined here as a four-fold or greater increase in antibody titer.
Figure 3Comparison between hemagglutination inhibition (HI) and virus neutralization (VM).
A) baseline sample titers (n = 45 for HI, n = 45 for VM); B) follow-up sample titers (n = 45 for HI, n = 44 for VM); C) fold rise in titer for follow-up relative to baseline titer (n = 45 for HI, n = 44 for VM). In all three panels, lines denote the reverse cumulative distribution with error bars representing the 95% confidence intervals.
Hemagglutination inhibition titers and seroconversion to different influenza A strains (N = 45).
| Antibody titers, % | |||||||
| Strain | Sample | <10 | 10–20 | ≥40 | GMT (95% CI) | p-value | SC |
| A/California/7/2009 H1N1 (pandemic) | Baseline | 84 | 16 | 0 | 6 (5–6) | - | - |
| Follow-up | 4 | 18 | 78 | 59 (41–85) | <0.01 | 82 (69–91) | |
| A/Brisbane/59/2007 H1N1 (seasonal) | Baseline | 40 | 18 | 42 | 18 (12–26) | - | - |
| Follow-up | 29 | 11 | 60 | 36 (23–59) | <0.01 | 20 (11–34) | |
| A/Brisbane/10/2007 H3N2 (seasonal) | Baseline | 40 | 36 | 24 | 15 (10–22) | - | - |
| Follow-up | 36 | 24 | 40 | 20 (13–30) | 0.80 | 18 (9–31) | |
| A/Wisconsin/15/2009 H3N2 (seasonal) | Baseline | 67 | 16 | 18 | 10 (7–14) | - | - |
| Follow-up | 60 | 7 | 33 | 13 (9–20) | 0.43 | 16 (8–29) | |
*Wilcoxon signed-rank test comparing baseline and follow-up titers.
SC: seroconversion (4-fold or greater increase in titer).