促进癌症儿童的流感疫苗接种计划:一项前瞻性开放标签研究。

IF 6.5 1区 医学 Q1 IMMUNOLOGY
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

摘要

目前的免疫指南建议9岁以上儿童接种一剂流感疫苗,年龄更小或vaccine-naïve儿童接种两剂。然而,接受化疗的儿童免疫反应减弱。我们对在西澳大利亚州珀斯儿童医院接受癌症治疗的儿童进行了一项前瞻性开放标签研究,以检查强化流感治疗方案的安全性和有效性。这包括三剂儿童疫苗
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Boosting the influenza vaccine schedule in children with cancer: a prospective open-label study.

Boosting the influenza vaccine schedule in children with cancer: a prospective open-label study.

Boosting the influenza vaccine schedule in children with cancer: a prospective open-label study.

Boosting the influenza vaccine schedule in children with cancer: a prospective open-label study.

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.

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来源期刊
NPJ Vaccines
NPJ Vaccines Immunology 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.
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