Recombinant cold-adapted attenuated influenza A vaccines for use in children: Reactogenicity and antigenic activity of cold-adapted recombinants and analysis of isolates from the vaccinees

26Citations
Citations of this article
8Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Reactogenicity and antigenic activity of recombinants obtained by crossing cold-adapted donor of attenuation A/Leningrad/134/47/57 with wild-type influenza virus strains A/Leningrad/322/79(H1N1) and A/Bangkok/1/79(H3N2) were studied. The recombinants were areactogenic when administered as an intranasal spray to children aged 3 to 15, including those who lacked or had only low titers of pre-existing anti-hemagglutinin and anti-neuraminidase antibody in their blood. After two administrations of vaccines at a 3-week interval, both strains induced antibody in 75 to 95% of the children. On coinfection of chicken embryos with both recombinants, only weak interference was observed. Administration to children of the bivalent vaccine containing H1N1 and H3N2 recombinants induced efficient production of antibody to H1 and H3 hemagglutinins and N1 and N2 neuraminidases without adverse reactions. The recombinants studied were genetically stable as judged by retention of the temperature-sensitive phenotypes and a lack of reversion of the genes carrying temperature-sensitive mutations in all of the reisolates from vaccinated children.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Alexandrova, G. I., Polezhaev, F. I., Budilovsky, G. N., Garmashova, L. M., Topuria, N. A., Egorov, A. Y., … Ghendon, Y. Z. (1984). Recombinant cold-adapted attenuated influenza A vaccines for use in children: Reactogenicity and antigenic activity of cold-adapted recombinants and analysis of isolates from the vaccinees. Infection and Immunity, 44(3), 734–739. https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.44.3.734-739.1984

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free