| Literature DB >> 27022211 |
Pei Wen Lim1, Johan Garssen2, Elena Sandalova3.
Abstract
Vaccination, designed to trigger a protective immune response against infection, is a trigger for mild inflammatory responses. Vaccination studies can address the question of inflammation initiation, levels, and resolution as well as its regulation for respective studied pathogens. Such studies largely based on analyzing the blood components including specific antibodies and cytokines were usually constrained by number of participants and volume of collected blood sample. Hence, blood-based studies may not be able to cover the full dynamic range of inflammation responses induced by vaccination. In this review, the potential of using saliva in addition to blood for studying the kinetics of inflammatory response studies was assessed. Saliva sampling is noninvasive and has a great potential to be used for studies aimed at analysing the magnitude, time course, and variance in immune responses, including inflammation after vaccination. Based on a literature survey of inflammatory biomarkers that can be determined in saliva and an analysis of how these biomarkers could help to understand the mechanisms and dynamics of immune reactivity and inflammation, we propose that the saliva-based approach might have potential to add substantial value to clinical studies, particularly in vulnerable populations such as infants, toddlers, and ill individuals.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27022211 PMCID: PMC4789015 DOI: 10.1155/2016/6958293
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediators Inflamm ISSN: 0962-9351 Impact factor: 4.711
Figure 1Illustration of general paradigm of the regulation of inflammatory response.
Summary of studies on inflammatory response to vaccination.
| Vaccination | Year | Studies | Number of subjects | Markers | Type of sample | Time course | Level observed | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DTwP/DTaP, Hib, HBV, IPV | 1998 | [ | 89 preterm infants | IL-6, CRP | Serum | 0, 12, 36, 48 hours after injection | IL-6 (130 pg/mL) | IL-6: responded at the peak level at 12 hours after vaccination |
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| DT-Polio-Typhim | 2005 | [ | 7 elderly; 8 young adults | CRP, fibrinogen, albumin, | Plasma | 7 days before vaccination and 2 days after injection | CRP in elderly (7.1 mg/L); in young adults (11.5 mg/L) | CRP and AGP levels increased after 2 days after vaccination, ( |
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| Hepatitis B | 2013 | [ | 70 infants | IL-6, CRP | Plasma | 0 and 24 hours after injection | CRP (3.8 mg/L) | IL-6: no change ( |
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| 2000 | [ | 18 adults | Body temperature, IL-1 | Serum | 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 32 hours after injection | IL-6 (5.8 pg/mL) | No change in body temperature; no change in IL-1 |
| 2002 | [ | 17 adults | CRP, IL-6, IL-1Ra, TNF- | Plasma | 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8 hours after injection | Not indicated | CRP: No significant changes within 8 hours after vaccination | |
| 2005 | [ | 30 male adults | IL-1Ra, IL6, TNF- | Plasma | 0, 3, and 6 hours after injection | IL-6 (1.59 pg/mL) | IL-6: level increased after 3 h | |
| 2013 | [ | 8 male adults | CRP, IL-6, TNF- | Plasma | 0, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 24 hours after injection | CRP (<0.1 mg/L) | IL6: peak at 6-7 h ( | |
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| Influenza | 2005 | [ | 22 adults | CRP, IL-6, MCP-1, TNF- | Plasma | 0, 1, 3, and 7 days after injection | Influenza CRP | CRP: level increased at day-1 ( |
| 2011 | [ | 46 pregnant women | CRP, IL-6, TNF- | Serum | 0, 1, 2, and 7 days after injection | CRP (0.85 mg/L) | CRP: level increased one and two days after vaccination ( | |
| 2013 | [ | 28 pregnant & 28 nonpregnant women | IL-6, TNF- | Serum | 0, 1, 2, and 3 days after injection | IL-6 | TNF- | |
| Influenza; | 2004 | [ | 39 adults | CRP | Plasma | 0, 2, or 3 days or 4 or 5 days after injection | Influenza CRP (2.7 mg/L) | CRP: level increased and peak at day 2 after vaccination |
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| 17D yellow fever | 2002 | [ | 10 adults | IL-6, CRP, fibrinogen | Plasma | 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8 days after injection | IL-6 (0.33 pg/mL) | IL-6: level increased 30% on days 5 & 6 after injection ( |
Commercially available immunoassay (ELISA) for the detection of salivary markers.
| Salivary markers | Companies | Serum-saliva correlation | Sensitivity |
|---|---|---|---|
| 17 | Salimetrics | 0.64 | 3 pg/mL |
| DRG® | — | 3 pg/mL | |
| Rocky Mountain Diagnostics | — | 3.6 pg/mL | |
| Eagle Biosciences | — | 4.9 pg/mL | |
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| Alpha-amylase | Salimetrics | — | 0.4 U/mL |
| MyBiosource.com | — | 1.95 IU/mL | |
| Antibodies-onlines | — | 0.94 ng/mL | |
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| Androstenedione | Salimetrics | 0.77 | 5 pg/mL |
| DRG® | — | 5 pg/mL | |
| Eagle Biosciences | — | 0.5 pg/mL | |
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| C-reactive protein | Salimetrics | — | 10 pg/mL |
| AbCam | — | 0.25 ng/mL | |
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| Chromogranin | Salimetrics | — | 0.7 ng/mL |
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| Cortisol | Salimetrics | 0.91 |
<0.007 |
| DRG® | — | 0.0537 | |
| Biomatik | — | <1.20 ng/mL | |
| Eagle Bioscience | — | 0.025 ng/mL | |
| Rocky Mountain Diagnostics | — | 0.014 ng/mL | |
| BioVendor Laboratory Medicine, Inc. | — | 1.0 pg/mL | |
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| Cotinine | Salimetrics | — | 0.15 ng/mL |
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| DHEA | Salimetrics | 0.86 | 5 pg/mL |
| DRG® | — | 3.3 pg/mL | |
| Rocky Mountain Diagnostics | — | 2.2 pg/mL | |
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| DHEA-S | Salimetrics | — | 43 pg/mL |
| DRG® | — | 25 pg/mL | |
| ALPCO | — | 0.045 ng/mL | |
| Eagle Biosciences | — | 0.05 ng/mL | |
| Rocky Mountain Diagnostics | — | 0.045 ng/mL | |
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| Estradiol | Salimetrics | 0.80 | 0.1 pg/mL |
| DRG® | — | 0.085 pg/mL | |
| Eagle Biosciences | — | 0.5 pg/mL | |
| Rocky Mountain Diagnostics | — | 0.4 pg/mL | |
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| Estriol | Salimetrics | 0.87 | 1 pg/mL |
| DRG® | — | 2 pg/mL | |
| Biomatik | — | <0.03 ng/mL | |
| ALPCO | — | 1.1 pg/mL | |
| Eagle Biosciences | — | 0.5 pg/mL | |
| Rocky Mountain Diagnostics | — | 1.1 pg/mL | |
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| Estrone | Salimetrics | — | 1 pg/mL |
| DRG® | — | 4.74 pg/mL | |
| Biomatik | — | <1 pg/mL | |
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| Interleukin-6 | Salimetrics | — | 0.07 pg/mL |
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| Interleukin-1 Beta | Salimetrics | — | <0.37 pg/mL |
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| Melatonin | Salimetrics | 0.81 | 1.37 pg/mL |
| DRG® | — | 0.3 pg/mL | |
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| Progesterone | Salimetrics | 0.87 | 5 pg/mL |
| Eagle Biosciences | — | 4.9 pg/mL | |
| Biomatik | — | <20 pg/mL | |
| Rocky Mountain Diagnostics | — | 3.8 pg/mL | |
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| Secretory Immunoglobulin A | Salimetrics | — | 2.5 |
| DRG® | — | 0.5 | |
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| Testosterone | Salimetrics | 0.96 | 1 pg/mL |
| DRG® | — | 1.9 pg/mL | |
| MyBiosource.com | — | 1.9 pg/mL | |
| IBL | — | 1.0 pg/mL | |
| Eagle Biosciences | — | 2.96 pg/mL | |
| Biomatik | — | <1 pg/mL | |
| Rocky Mountain Diagnostics | — | 1.9 pg/mL | |
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| TNF- | Salimetrics | — | 0.106 pg/mL |