Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10969326 | Vaccine | 2011 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
A randomized clinical trial was conducted to assess whether the immunogenicity of seasonal and pandemic (H1N1/09) influenza vaccines is affected by the order of vaccine administration. 151 healthy adult volunteers were randomized into three groups. All groups received one dose (15 μg haemagglutinin) each of a pandemic H1N1 vaccine and a seasonal trivalent vaccine. Group 1 received the pandemic H1N1 vaccine first, followed by the seasonal vaccine 21 days later. Group 2 received vaccinations in vice versa and Group 3 received both vaccines simultaneously. Post-vaccination blood samples were collected to determine the immunogenicity by hemagglutination-inhibition (HI), microneutralization (MN), and B cell ELISPOT assays. All three vaccination strategies were well-tolerated and generated specific immune responses. However, we found a significant difference in magnitude of antibody responses to pandemic H1N1 between the three groups. Pre- or co-vaccination with the seasonal flu vaccine led to a significant reduction by 50% in HI titre to pandemic H1N1 virus after pandemic vaccination. Pre- or co-vaccination of pandemic H1N1 vaccine had no effect on seasonal flu vaccination. MN and ELISPOT assays showed a similar effect. Vaccination with pandemic H1N1 vaccine first is recommended to avoid an associated inhibitory effect by the seasonal trivalent flu vaccine. Clinical_Trials identifier: NCT01008137.
Keywords
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Immunology and Microbiology
Immunology
Authors
Jiang Wu, Xiang Zhong, Chris Ka-fai Li, Jian-fang Zhou, Min Lu, Kuan-Ying Huang, Mei Dong, Yan Liu, Feng-Ji Luo, Ning Du, Cecilia Chui, Li-Qi Liu, Nicola M.G. Smith, Bo Li, Nian-Min Shi, Li-Fei Song, Yan Gao, Da-Yan Wang, Yuelong Shu,