Abstract
The capacity of patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) to develop an adequate antibody response to influenza vaccination in relation to the CD4 cell count has been studied in a prospective study. A total of 73 subjects (54 HIV-infected patients and 19 healthy control persons) were vaccinated with influenza subunit vaccine containing 15 μg hemagglutinin of each of the following strains: A/Beijing/353/89(H3N2), A/Singapore/6/86(H1N1), B/Panama/45/90, and B/Beijing/1/87. Hemagglutinin inhibition (HI) antibody titers were determined prior to vaccination, 3 weeks afterwards, and at the end of the influenza season. The percentage of subjects with HI antibody titers above the assumed protective level was significantly lower in the HIV-infected patients for all 4 vaccine strains compared with those in the control group (7–26% and 42–74%, respectively). There was an association between CD4 cell count and antibody response to the B/Panama strain only. The serologic response to tetravalent subunit influenza vaccine is severely impaired in the majority of HIV-infected patients compared with control subjects. The results of this study challenges the recommendation to vaccinate HIV-infected patients.
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