Sung K Chiu, Eliska Furlong, Elizabeth J McKinnon, Annette Fox, Stephany Sánchez Ovando, Louise Carolan, Andrew McLean-Tooke, Joyce Oommen, Daniel K Yeoh, Laurence C Cheung, Nicholas G Gottardo, Rishi S Kotecha
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Current immunization guidelines recommend one dose of influenza vaccine for children aged ≥9 years and two doses for younger or vaccine-naïve children. However, children receiving chemotherapy have an attenuated immune response. We performed a prospective open-label study in children undergoing treatment for cancer at Perth Children's Hospital, Western Australia, to examine the safety and efficacy of a boosted influenza schedule. This comprised three vaccine doses for children <9 years of age and two doses for those ≥9 years, with each dose administered at least 4 weeks apart. The additional vaccine dose was well-tolerated with no serious adverse events reported; it also resulted in improved geometric mean antibody titres for A/H1N1 (70 to 97, p = 0.003), A/H3N2 (76 to 104, p = 0.003) and B/Washington (148 to 179, p = 0.03) strains. In summary, a boosted influenza vaccine schedule is safe and improves humoral immune response, providing a readily implementable strategy to protect children undergoing treatment for cancer.
NPJ VaccinesImmunology and Microbiology-Immunology
CiteScore
11.90
自引率
4.30%
发文量
146
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊介绍:
Online-only and open access, npj Vaccines is dedicated to highlighting the most important scientific advances in vaccine research and development.