Variable efficacy of repeated annual influenza vaccination
- 23 November 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 96 (24) , 14001-14006
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.96.24.14001
Abstract
Conclusions have differed in studies that have compared vaccine efficacy in groups receiving influenza vaccine for the first time to efficacy in groups vaccinated more than once. For example, the Hoskins study [Hoskins, T. W., Davis, J. R., Smith, A. J., Miller, C. L. & Allchin, A. (1979) Lancet i, 33–35] concluded that repeat vaccination was not protective in the long term, whereas the Keitel study [Keitel, W. A., Cate, T. R., Couch, R. B., Huggins, L. L. & Hess, K. R. (1997) Vaccine 15, 1114–1122] concluded that repeat vaccination provided continual protection. We propose an explanation, the antigenic distance hypothesis, and test it by analyzing seven influenza outbreaks that occurred during the Hoskins and Keitel studies. The hypothesis is that variation in repeat vaccine efficacy is due to differences in antigenic distances among vaccine strains and between the vaccine strains and the epidemic strain in each outbreak. To test the hypothesis, antigenic distances were calculated from historical hemagglutination inhibition assay tables, and a computer model of the immune response was used to predict the vaccine efficacy of individuals given different vaccinations. The model accurately predicted the observed vaccine efficacies in repeat vaccinees relative to the efficacy in first-time vaccinees (correlation 0.87). Thus, the antigenic distance hypothesis offers a parsimonious explanation of the differences between and within the Hoskins and Keitel studies. These results have implications for the selection of influenza vaccine strains, and also for vaccination strategies for other antigenically variable pathogens that might require repeated vaccination.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- The plea against annual influenza vaccination? ‘The Hoskins' Paradox’ revisitedVaccine, 1998
- Deriving Shape Space Parameters from Immunological DataJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1997
- Immune response of adults to sequential influenza vaccinationJournal of Medical Virology, 1984
- Antibody response to immunization with influenza A/USSR/77 (H1N1) virus in young individuals primed or unprimed for A/New Jersey/76 (H1N1) virusEpidemiology and Infection, 1981
- Theoretical studies of clonal selection: Minimal antibody repertoire size and reliability of self-non-self discriminationJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1979
- EFFECT OF INFLUENZA VACCINES IN STIMULATING ANTIBODY IN VOLUNTEERS WITH PRIOR IMMUNITYThe Lancet, 1973
- EFFECT OF TWO DOSES OF INFLUENZA VACCINE IN STIMULATING ANTIBODY IN VOLUNTEERSThe Lancet, 1973
- DISQUISITIONS ON ORIGINAL ANTIGENIC SINThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1966
- EPIDEMIOLOGIC AND IMMUNOLOGIC SIGNIFICANCE OF AGE DISTRIBUTION OF ANTIBODY TO ANTIGENIC VARIANTS OF INFLUENZA VIRUSThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1953
- SOUTHEY THE LAUREATE.The Lancet, 1823