Abstract

The effect of serum bactericidal antibody on colonization with non-typable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHI) was studied in 26 children. Serum bactericidal antibody did not prevent colonization with NTHI in the nasopharynx. Antibody was present in 53% before, 91% during and 100% after documented colonization of the nasopharynx with NTHI. In addition, 5 children with recurrent otitis media with effusion (OME) due to NTHI were observed for bactericidal serum antibody during a 4-year period. Bactericidal antibody against the causative NTHI strain was not detected in the acute sera of any patient during each episode, but was observed in the convalescent sera of all of the patients. The bactericidal antibody in the convalescent serum did not appear to be protective against colonization and recurrence of disease by a different heterologous strain of NTHI. However, bactericidal antibody was augmented in some cases by a heterologous infection with NTHI. We confirmed the emergence of new strains of NTHI with DNA fingerprinting and outer membrane protein (OMP) analysis. The data suggest that the immune response to NTHI in OME is usually strain-specific, and furthermore, the results demonstrate that strain-specific bactericidal antibody does not prevent colonization in the nasopharynx with the homologous or heterologous bacterial strains. In general, bactericidal antibody is not cross-protective against heterologous strains of NTHI causing a second or third episode of otitis media with NTHI.

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