| Literature DB >> 31183393 |
Nicola Cotugno1, Alessandra Ruggiero1, Veronica Santilli1, Emma Concetta Manno1, Salvatore Rocca1, Sonia Zicari1, Donato Amodio1, Manuela Colucci2, Paolo Rossi1, Ofer Levy3,4, Federico Martinon-Torres5,6, Andrew J Pollard7, Paolo Palma1.
Abstract
Routine vaccination is among the most effective clinical interventions to prevent diseases as it is estimated to save over 3 million lives every year. However, the full potential of global immunization programs is not realised because population coverage is still suboptimal. This is also due to the inadequate immune response and paucity of informative correlates of protection upon immunization of vulnerable individuals such as newborns, preterm infants, pregnant women, and elderly individuals as well as those patients affected by chronic and immune compromising medical conditions. In addition, these groups are undervaccinated for a number of reasons, including lack of awareness of vaccine-preventable diseases and uncertainty or misconceptions about the safety and efficacy of vaccination by parents and healthcare providers. The presence of these nonresponders/undervaccinated individuals represents a major health and economic burden to society, which will become particularly difficult to address in settings with limited public resources. This review describes innovative and experimental approaches that can help identify specific genomic profiles defining nonresponder individuals for whom specific interventions might be needed. We will provide examples that show how such information can be useful to identify novel biomarkers of safety and immunogenicity for future vaccine trials. Finally, we will discuss how system biology "OMICs" data can be used to design bioinformatic tools to predict the vaccination outcome providing genetic and molecular "signatures" of protective immune response. This strategy may soon enable identification of signatures highly predictive of vaccine safety, immunogenicity, and efficacy/protection thereby informing personalized vaccine interventions in vulnerable populations.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31183393 PMCID: PMC6512027 DOI: 10.1155/2019/8732191
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Figure 1Conventional and system biology “OMICs” technologies [35] currently available to predict vaccine-induced immune response.
Figure 2The figure shows changes in populations' composition with special vaccination needs over time. Traditionally, only elderly people and infants were considered vulnerable. During this time period, little scientific evidence regarding vaccine responses of different populations was available, and a single vaccination schedule was proposed for all (empirical medicine). Currently, an increasing number of people with special vaccination needs, such as immunocompromised patients and pregnant women, are considered in specific vaccine programs based on expert opinion and on extrapolated data from healthy individuals (stratified medicine). In the near future, the increased number and life expectancy of groups with special vaccination needs will lead to large-scale population studies. This approach will provide robust scientific evidence and new correlates of protection and safety. As a result, rationalisation of vaccine strategies (antigens, adjuvants, etc.) and personalization of approaches will increase vaccination efficacy and safety in these populations within a framework of personalized medicine.