| Literature DB >> 26089824 |
Alexander W Kay1, Catherine A Blish2.
Abstract
Pregnant women are at high risk from influenza due to disproportionate morbidity, mortality, and adverse pregnancy outcomes following infection. As such, they are classified as a high-priority group for vaccination. However, changes in the maternal immune system required to accommodate the allogeneic fetus may alter the immunogenicity of influenza vaccines. A large number of studies have evaluated the safety of the influenza vaccine. Here, we will review available studies on the immunogenicity and efficacy of the influenza vaccine during pregnancy, focusing on both humoral and cellular immunity.Entities:
Keywords: antibody; immunogenicity; inactivated influenza vaccine; influenza; pregnancy
Year: 2015 PMID: 26089824 PMCID: PMC4455389 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2015.00289
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Studies evaluating IIV and monovalent pH1N1 vaccine responses during pregnancy.
| Reference | Vaccine, years | Study participants | Immune assays and outcomes | Vaccine response | Summary |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Steinhoff et al. ( | Seasonal IIV 2004 | 340 pregnant Bangladeshi women in the third trimester | HI titers pre- and post-vaccination. Influenza disease endpoints | Seroprotection for H1N1 88%, H3N2 98%, and B 45%. Ratio of maternal to infant titers at delivery ranged from 0.7 to 1.7 | High rates of seroconversion and seroprotection following IIV in pregnant women. Reduction in febrile respiratory illness in mothers. Reduction in laboratory-confirmed influenza in infants |
| Sperling et al. ( | Seasonal IIV 2006–2010 and H1N1 vaccination 2009–2010 | 239 pregnant women (73 first, 183 second, 142 third Trimester, 73 immediately postpartum, 36 6 weeks postpartum | HI Titers pre- and post-vaccination to influenza A strains | Seroprotection for H3N2 varied from 65 to 95% and between 75 and 98% for H1N1 strains. | No significant difference in seroprotection or seroconversion by trimester or postpartum. No differences in IgG subtype production in pregnancy vs. postpartum |
| IgG subtyping pre- and post-vaccination | |||||
| Christian et al. ( | Seasonal IIV, 2011–2012 | 28 pregnant women (average gestational age 28.4 weeks) and 28 non-pregnant women | Serum cytokines (prior to, 1, 2, and 3 days post-vaccination) and HI titers pre- and 1 month post-vaccination | Seroprotection rates in pregnant vs. control for H1N1 (89 vs. 85%), H3N2 (81 vs. 93%), and B (83 vs. 100%) were not-statistically different. There were also no significant differences in seroconversion | High rates of seroprotection and seroconversion were observed in both groups. There was not a significant effect observed secondary to vaccination in the prior year. See text for a review of the cytokine responses |
| Schlaudecker et al. ( | Seasonal IIV, 2011–2012 | 29 pregnant women, all trimesters, 22 non-pregnant women | HI titers pre- and post- vaccination | Seroprotection H1N1 93–100%, H3N2 100%, B 58.6–68.2%. Post-vaccination H1N1 GMT 152.53 pregnant vs. 300.46 control, H3N2 GMT 142.0 pregnant vs. 241.0 control | No difference between pregnant and control groups in seroprotection, seroconversion, or fold increase. Significantly increased post-vaccination titers to H1N1 and H3N2 in control women |
| Greater than 96% of participants received vaccine in the prior year | |||||
| Madhi et al. ( | Seasonal IIV, 2011–2012, 2012–2013 | 2116 pregnant women were enrolled, 1062 received IIV, and 1054 received placebo. All trimesters included. An HIV positive subset was included | HI titers pre-vaccination and 28–35 days post-vaccination. Multiple influenza disease endpoints evaluated | Seroprotection to H1N1 93.3%, H3N2 78.0%, and B 96%. Overall vaccine efficacy of preventing confirmed influenza 54.4%. Seroprotection in HIV-infected was 48.6% H3N2 and 68.6% H1N1, but vaccine efficacy was 70.6% in this subset | High levels of seroprotection for HIV-uninfected women post-vaccination. Decreased seroprotection in HIV-infected women but increased vaccine efficacy. Protection from laboratory-confirmed influenza in pregnant women and their infants |
| Kay et al. ( | Seasonal IIV, 2012–2013 | 20 pregnant women, second and third trimesters, 18 non-pregnant women. Significantly fewer pregnant women had received the vaccination in the prior year | HI titers, VMN titers, and plasmablast identification pre- and post-vaccination | Seroprotection H1N1 100%, H3N2 94.4–100%, B 77.8–90.0%. HI and VMN titers were strongly correlated for each strain. Plasmablasts 1.32% pregnant vs. 0.46% control 7 days post-vaccination ( | No difference in post-vaccination titers in pregnant vs. control women. Increased fold-changes and decreased pre-vaccine titers in pregnant women. Possibly increased plasmablast induction in pregnant women |
| Reference | Vaccine, dose | Study participants | Immune assays | Vaccine response | Summary |
| Zuccotti et al. ( | MF59 adjuvented pH1N1 monovalent vaccine (7.5 μg) | 75 pregnant women (third trimester). Infants were also enrolled through 5 months | HI titers were collected at delivery, 2 months and 5 months post-delivery. No pre-vaccination titer | Seroprotection in 100% of pregnant women at delivery, 2 and 5 months. Seroprotection in 95.6% of infants at delivery and 2 months and 81.2% at 5 months. Infant/maternal antibody ratio of 0.55 at delivery | High rates of seroprotection in pregnant women and their infants following adjuvanted pH1N1 vaccination. Persistent protective antibody levels through 5 months in infants and their mothers |
| Ohfuji et al. ( | Two doses of monovalent pH1N1 vaccination (15 μg) | 150 pregnant women, all trimesters | HI titers before the first vaccine, 3 weeks after the first vaccine and 4 weeks after the second dose | Seroprotection was observed in 91% after the first dose. No significant change was noted after the second dose | High rates of seroprotection were seen after one dose of the vaccine. Receipt of seasonal influenza vaccination <19 days prior to receipt of the monovalent pandemic vaccination was associated with decreased HI responses |
| Tsatsaris et al. ( | Single dose of monovalent pH1N1 vaccine (15 μg) | 110 women equally divided between the second and third trimesters. Infant cord bloods collected | HI and VMN titers pre- and post-vaccination | Seroprotection was observed in 98% post-vaccination and 93% of women seroconverted. HI and VMN titers were highly correlated ( | High rates of seroprotection after a single dose. Women with twins had significantly lower post-vaccination titers. Prior seasonal influenza vaccination was associated with lower fold increase. Significantly higher titers in cord blood suggesting active transport of antibody generated by IIV |
| Jackson et al. ( | Two doses of monovalent pH1N1 vaccine at different doses (25, 49 μg) | 120 women in the second or third trimester, 60 received the 25 μg and 60 received the 49 μg vaccine. Infant cord bloods collected | HI and VMN pre and post-vaccinations | 93% of women met criteria for seroprotection after a single dose. No significant benefit to two doses or the vaccine with increased antigen content. HI and VMN correlation ( | High rates of seroprotection after a single dose. No association with vaccine response and prior receipt of seasonal influenza. Significantly higher titers in cord blood suggesting active transport of antibody generated by IIV |
HI, hemagglutinin inhibition assay; VMN, viral microneutralization assay; GMT, geometric mean titer; GMR, geometric mean ratio; Seroprotection, HI titer ≥1:40; Seroconversion, fourfold or greater change in HI titer post-vaccination; IIV, inactivated influenza vaccine.