Abstract

To the Editor—“I am worried that my child will get this serious side effect if she is vaccinated” is a common concern raised by parents of infants and toddlers. Since vaccines are generally very safe, many of these concerns can be assuaged. However, a few vaccinated children will experience serious adverse events. While current vaccines are of major public health benefit, history has taught us that even the slightest concern over a serious adverse event, perceived or real, has the inherent capacity to compromise public confidence in the specific vaccine and vaccination in general [1]. Thus, we should strive to pursue avenues of research that could improve vaccine safety even further. How do we acquire this knowledge? While there are examples of epidemiologic studies identifying risk factors for adverse events [2, 3], effort should be put into expanding substantially on these findings and translating them to clinically useful risk scores. Additionally, it has been suggested that genetic factors could influence the propensity for developing adverse events [4]. Indeed, preliminary work supports this concept, with 2 candidate-gene studies reporting associations between variants in certain immune system genes and adverse events such as fever following smallpox vaccination [5, 6]. We recently conducted a genome-wide association study to investigate genetic determinants of febrile seizures that occur following measles, mumps, rubella (MMR) vaccination [7]. Between 3 and 16 excess cases of febrile seizures per 10 000 children can be attributed to MMR, representing one of the most common serious adverse events following vaccination overall. As compared with controls without febrile seizures, 2 genetic loci that harbor innate immunity genes IFI44L and CD46 were associated with MMR-related febrile seizures at the genome-wide significance level. IFI44L is an interferon-stimulated gene known to be upregulated by viral infection including measles. CD46 encodes a membrane protein that has several functions including a confirmed action as a cellular receptor for measles virus. The loci encompassing IFI44L and CD46 were associated specifically with MMR-related febrile seizures; ie, significant associations were observed vs controls as well as vs febrile seizures unrelated to MMR vaccination (Table ​(Table1).1). An additional 4 genetic loci were significantly associated with febrile seizures overall, including ANO3, SCN1A, SCN2A, and a locus related to magnesium regulation, pointing to the importance of altered ion channel function in seizure susceptibility. Table 1. Genetic Variants Distinctly Associated With Febrile Seizures Following Measles, Mumps, Rubella Vaccination While much work remains to elucidate how the interaction between these genes and their products and the MMR vaccine could lead to fever and febrile seizures, the results provide firm evidence that there are genetic determinants of vaccine adverse events. Further, they open up novel avenues toward personalized medicine in vaccinology, a field that has focused on the population level alone. For instance, we envision a clinical future where genetic information as well as data regarding other biomarkers are integrated with clinical variables to derive individualized risk scores that predict adverse events. Additionally, the ability to design new vaccines that are completely free from adverse events will come from knowledge of the mechanisms of adverse events with currently available vaccines.

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