Abstract
Influenza vaccination remains the best strategy for the prevention of influenza virus-related disease and reduction of disease severity and mortality. However, there is large individual variation in influenza vaccine responses. In this study, we investigated the effects of gender, age, underlying diseases, and medication on vaccine responses in 1,852 Icelanders of broad age range who received trivalent inactivated influenza virus vaccination in 2012, 2013, or 2015. Hemagglutination inhibition (HAI) and microneutralization (MN) titers were measured in pre- and post-vaccination sera. Of the variables tested, the strongest association was with level of pre-vaccination titer that explained a major part of the variance observed in post-vaccination titers, ranging from 19 to 29%, and from 7 to 21% in fold change (FC), depending on the strain and serological (HAI or MN) analysis performed. Thus, increasing pre-vaccination titer associated with decreasing FC (P = 1.1 × 10−99–8.6 × 10−30) and increasing post-vaccination titer (P = 2.1 × 10−159–1.1 × 10−123). Questionnaires completed by 87% of the participants revealed that post-vaccination HAI titer showed association with repeated previous influenza vaccinations. Gender had no effect on vaccine response whereas age had a strong effect and explained 1.6–3.1% of HAI post-vaccination titer variance and 3.1% of H1N1 MN titer variance. Vaccine response, both fold increase and seroprotection rate (percentage of individuals reaching HAI ≥ 40 or MN ≥ 20), was higher in vaccinees ≤37 years of age (YoA) than all other age groups. Furthermore, a reduction was observed in the H1N1 MN titer in people ≥63 YoA, demonstrating a decreased neutralizing functionality of vaccine-induced antibodies at older age. We tested the effects of underlying autoimmune diseases, asthma and allergic diseases and did not observe significant associations with vaccine responses. Intake of immune modulating medication did not show any association. Taken together, our results show that previous encounter of influenza vaccination or infection, reflected in high HAI and MN pre-vaccination titer has the strongest negative effect on vaccine responses measured as FC and the strongest positive effect on post-vaccination titer. Increasing age had also an effect but not gender, underlying disease or medication.
Highlights
The influenza virus causes 3–5 million cases of severe illness each year resulting in 250,000–500,000 deaths, most of which occur in elderly people [≥65 years of age (YoA)] [1]
We found that previous influenza virus encounter measured by high-pre-vaccination titer showed strong negative association with fold change (FC) levels whereas it showed positive association with the post-vaccination titer
MN titer was measured for the whole study group for H1N1 and for a subset of 336 for H3N2 and B strains
Summary
The influenza virus causes 3–5 million cases of severe illness each year resulting in 250,000–500,000 deaths, most of which occur in elderly people [≥65 years of age (YoA)] [1]. We decided to investigate influenza vaccine responses in unselected Icelandic vaccinees of a broad age range and health conditions. Vaccine-induced hemagglutin (HA) titers are widely accepted as a correlate of protection against influenza illness and are measured by the ability of HA-specific antibodies to block N-acetylneuraminic acid mediated viral agglutination of red blood cells using a hemagglutination inhibition (HAI) assay [8, 9]. In addition to measuring antibodies capable of neutralizing the strain specific and immunodominant head domain, MN have been shown to detect antibodies directed to the conserved stalk of HA that could give rise to a broad protection against different strains of influenza A virus [10].
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