Abstract

BackgroundAsthma is an independent risk factor for invasive pneumococcal disease; however, the immune response of adult asthma patients to pneumococcal vaccination is unknown. We explore the serologic response of patients with moderate to severe asthma to the 23-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine (PPSV23).MethodsSeventeen moderate to severe adult asthma patients that had not been vaccinated against pneumococcus over the 5 previous years were prospectively recruited from a tertiary care asthma clinic. Serum was analyzed for the presence of antibodies to five capsular polysaccharide (CP) antigens (6B, 9V, 19A, 19F, 23F) before and 4 weeks after PPSV23 vaccination.ResultsThere was a wide variability in baseline anti-CP antibody concentrations. Other than for serotype 19A, our patients frequently have baseline anti-CP antibody concentrations below 1 µg/mL (35% for serotype 19F, 41% for serotypes 9V and 23F, and 59% for serotype 6B). All post-vaccination geometric mean antibody concentrations were significantly higher than baseline. In the 31 tests where the baseline antibody concentration was <1 µg/mL, 77.4% had at least a twofold increase post-vaccination. Despite this, a large proportion of post-vaccination anti-CP antibody concentrations remained <1 µg/mL (51.6% of tests). Nine patients had at least one anti-CP antibody concentration <1 µg/mL post-vaccination. There was no difference between these patients and the remaining eight patients in demographic or clinical variables.ConclusionsPatients with moderate to severe asthma have variable baseline and low post-vaccination antibody concentrations to common CP antigens included in the PPSV23 vaccine. The clinical relevance of these observations remains to be determined since the threshold concentration in adults required for clinical protection from invasive pneumococcal disease is uncertain.

Highlights

  • Asthma is an independent risk factor for invasive pneumococcal disease; the immune response of adult asthma patients to pneumococcal vaccination is unknown

  • This study presents pre- and post-vaccination antibody concentrations of adult patients with moderate to severe asthma immunized with 23-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine (PPSV23)

  • Our study suggests that patients with asthma may remain at risk of developing Invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) after receiving vaccination with PPSV23, as they may not achieve an adequate antibody concentration threshold that confers clinical protection

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Summary

Introduction

Asthma is an independent risk factor for invasive pneumococcal disease; the immune response of adult asthma patients to pneumococcal vaccination is unknown. The Public Health Agency of Canada recognizes asthma “as a highrisk condition warranting vaccination to prevent IPD” and recommends that “adults requiring medical attention for asthma in the last 12 months” should receive one dose of PPSV23 to prevent IPD [7]. These recommendations are similar to other North American guidelines regarding pneumococcal vaccination [8]; there remains uncertainty regarding the efficacy of pneumococcal immunization in this population

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