Antibody responses after primary immunization in infants born to women receiving a Pertussis-containing vaccine during pregnancy: Single arm observational study with a historical comparator

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Abstract

Introduction. In England, antenatal pertussis immunization using a tetanus/low-dose diphtheria/5-component acellular-pertussis/inactivated-polio (TdaP5/IPV) vaccine was introduced in October 2012. We assessed infant responses to antigens in the maternal vaccine and to those conjugated to tetanus (TT) or the diphtheria toxin variant, CRM. Methods. Infants of 141 TdaP5/IPV-vaccinated mothers in Southern England immunized with DTaP5/IPV/Haemophilus influenzae b (Hib-TT) vaccine at 2-3-4 months, 13-valent pneumococcal vaccine (PCV13, CRM-conjugated) at 2-4 months and 1 or 2 meningococcal C vaccine (MCC-CRM- or MCC-TT) doses at 3-4 months had blood samples taken at 2 and/or 5 months of age. Results. Antibody responses to pertussis toxin (PT), filamentous hemagglutinin (FHA), fimbriae 2 + 3 (FIMs), diphtheria, tetanus, Hib, MCC and PCV13 serotypes were compared to responses in a historical cohort of 246 infants born to mothers not vaccinated in pregnancy. Infants had high pertussis antibody concentrations pre-immunization but only PT antibodies increased post-immunization (fold-change, 2.64; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.12-3.30; P

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Ladhani, S. N., Andrews, N. J., Southern, J., Jones, C. E., Amirthalingam, G., Waight, P. A., … Miller, E. (2015). Antibody responses after primary immunization in infants born to women receiving a Pertussis-containing vaccine during pregnancy: Single arm observational study with a historical comparator. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 61(11), 1637–1644. https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/civ695

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