Pneumococcal vaccine hyporesponsiveness in people living with HIV: A narrative review of immunological mechanisms and insights from minimally invasive lymph node sampling.
IF 4.1 4区 医学Q2 BIOTECHNOLOGY & APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY
Giovanni E Loe-Sack-Sioe, Danny W de Vos, Leo G Visser, Simon P Jochems, Anna H E Roukens
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Despite highly effective antiretroviral therapy, people living with HIV (PLWH) remain at elevated risk for invasive pneumococcal disease. Clinical studies show that, even with high CD4+ counts, PLWH exhibit diminished serological responses and rapid antibody decline following pneumococcal vaccination, plausibly due to underlying immune dysfunction. Germinal centers (GCs), located within lymph nodes, are essential for generating high-affinity antibodies, but are structurally and functionally disrupted in PLWH. These local impairments, combined with systemic immune dysregulation, contribute to vaccine hyporesponsiveness in PLWH. This narrative review links immunological findings from experimental and in vivo studies to clinical pneumococcal vaccine trials, to investigate mechanisms that may be leveraged to strengthen vaccine-induced immunity in PLWH. We also highlight the application of fine needle aspiration (FNA) of the lymph node as a way to study pneumococcal vaccine hyporesponsiveness in the GC and provide potential direction to improve responses for next-generation pneumococcal conjugate vaccines in PLWH.
期刊介绍:
(formerly Human Vaccines; issn 1554-8619)
Vaccine research and development is extending its reach beyond the prevention of bacterial or viral diseases. There are experimental vaccines for immunotherapeutic purposes and for applications outside of infectious diseases, in diverse fields such as cancer, autoimmunity, allergy, Alzheimer’s and addiction. Many of these vaccines and immunotherapeutics should become available in the next two decades, with consequent benefit for human health. Continued advancement in this field will benefit from a forum that can (A) help to promote interest by keeping investigators updated, and (B) enable an exchange of ideas regarding the latest progress in the many topics pertaining to vaccines and immunotherapeutics.
Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics provides such a forum. It is published monthly in a format that is accessible to a wide international audience in the academic, industrial and public sectors.