Baseline CD3+CD56+ (NKT-like) Cells and the Outcome of Influenza Vaccination in Children Undergoing Chemotherapy

BackgroundIn children undergoing chemotherapy yearly influenza vaccination is recommended by treatment protocols. We investigated the relationship between cellular immunity and the antibody response to inactivated influenza vaccines.Methods25 patients (age: 2-18 years) undergoing chemotherapy for di...

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Main Authors: Evelin A. Leibinger, Gábor Pauler, Noémi Benedek, Tímea Berki, István Jankovics, Richard McNally, Gábor Ottóffy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Immunology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2021.690940/full
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spelling doaj-d1736790d09d496fbe6d52e8811e2c812021-06-29T07:15:34ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Immunology1664-32242021-06-011210.3389/fimmu.2021.690940690940Baseline CD3+CD56+ (NKT-like) Cells and the Outcome of Influenza Vaccination in Children Undergoing ChemotherapyEvelin A. Leibinger0Gábor Pauler1Noémi Benedek2Tímea Berki3István Jankovics4Richard McNally5Gábor Ottóffy6Division of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology, Department of Pediatrics, University of Pécs Medical School, Pécs, HungaryInstitute of Mathematics and Informatics, University of Pécs, Pécs, HungaryDivision of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology, Department of Pediatrics, University of Pécs Medical School, Pécs, HungaryDepartment of Immunology and Biotechnology, University of Pécs Medical School, Pécs, HungaryDepartment of Virology, National Center for Epidemiology, Budapest, HungaryPopulation Health Sciences Institute, Newcastle University, Newcastle, United KingdomDivision of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology, Department of Pediatrics, University of Pécs Medical School, Pécs, HungaryBackgroundIn children undergoing chemotherapy yearly influenza vaccination is recommended by treatment protocols. We investigated the relationship between cellular immunity and the antibody response to inactivated influenza vaccines.Methods25 patients (age: 2-18 years) undergoing chemotherapy for different malignancies participated in our study. Flow cytometric detection of peripheral blood lymphocyte subpopulations together with hemagglutination inhibition antibody titers were measured before and 21-28 days after vaccination. We examined the ratio and total numbers of CD3+, CD4+, CD8+ T cells, activated helper (CD3+CD4+CD25low), regulatory (CD3+CD4+CD25high), naive (CD3+CD45RA+) and memory (CD3+CD45RO+) T cells, CD56+NK, and CD3+CD56+ (NKT-like) cells. Relationships between specific antibody responses (seroprotection, seroconversion, geometric mean titer (GMT), geometric mean fold increase (GMFI)) and the ratios and counts of lymphocyte subpopulations were evaluated using one-way ANOVA and the paired sample t test after dichotomization according to age-related reference values.ResultsPatients with CD4+ lymphocyte levels in the normal age-specific range showed significantly better response regarding postvaccination GMT elevation for H1N1 and H3N2 strains (97.52 vs. 19.2, p=0.019, 80 vs. 14.43, p=0.021, respectively). GMFI results were significant only against B strain (2.69-fold vs. 1.23-fold, p=0.046). Prevaccination CD3+CD56+ (NKT-like) cells above predicted values according to age showed significant associations both in postvaccination GMT elevation (H1N1: 75.11 vs. 14.14, p=0.010; H3N2: 62.18 vs. 11.22, p=0.012; B: 22.69 vs. 6.67, p=0.043) and GMFI against all three strains (H1N1: 3.76-fold vs. 1.06-fold, p=0.015; H3N2: 2.74-fold vs. 1, p=0.013; B: 2.57-fold vs. 1, p=0.008). By one-way ANOVA, we found a positive relation between absolute lymphocyte cell count above 1000/µl and the postvaccination GMT elevation against H3N2 (12.81 vs. 56.56, p=0.032), and GMFI regarding H1N1 (1.22-fold vs. 3.48-fold, p=0.044).ConclusionsIn addition to verifying the predictive value of absolute lymphocyte count above 1000/µl, our results suggest an association between NKT-like cell counts and the specific antibody response against all three investigated influenza strains in highly immunosuppressed patients. Furthermore, prevaccination CD4+ lymphocyte levels in the normal age-specific range may influence seroresponse.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2021.690940/fullinfluenza vaccinespediatricsimmunosuppressionnatural killer T-cellslymphocyte subsetscellular immunity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Evelin A. Leibinger
Gábor Pauler
Noémi Benedek
Tímea Berki
István Jankovics
Richard McNally
Gábor Ottóffy
spellingShingle Evelin A. Leibinger
Gábor Pauler
Noémi Benedek
Tímea Berki
István Jankovics
Richard McNally
Gábor Ottóffy
Baseline CD3+CD56+ (NKT-like) Cells and the Outcome of Influenza Vaccination in Children Undergoing Chemotherapy
Frontiers in Immunology
influenza vaccines
pediatrics
immunosuppression
natural killer T-cells
lymphocyte subsets
cellular immunity
author_facet Evelin A. Leibinger
Gábor Pauler
Noémi Benedek
Tímea Berki
István Jankovics
Richard McNally
Gábor Ottóffy
author_sort Evelin A. Leibinger
title Baseline CD3+CD56+ (NKT-like) Cells and the Outcome of Influenza Vaccination in Children Undergoing Chemotherapy
title_short Baseline CD3+CD56+ (NKT-like) Cells and the Outcome of Influenza Vaccination in Children Undergoing Chemotherapy
title_full Baseline CD3+CD56+ (NKT-like) Cells and the Outcome of Influenza Vaccination in Children Undergoing Chemotherapy
title_fullStr Baseline CD3+CD56+ (NKT-like) Cells and the Outcome of Influenza Vaccination in Children Undergoing Chemotherapy
title_full_unstemmed Baseline CD3+CD56+ (NKT-like) Cells and the Outcome of Influenza Vaccination in Children Undergoing Chemotherapy
title_sort baseline cd3+cd56+ (nkt-like) cells and the outcome of influenza vaccination in children undergoing chemotherapy
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Immunology
issn 1664-3224
publishDate 2021-06-01
description BackgroundIn children undergoing chemotherapy yearly influenza vaccination is recommended by treatment protocols. We investigated the relationship between cellular immunity and the antibody response to inactivated influenza vaccines.Methods25 patients (age: 2-18 years) undergoing chemotherapy for different malignancies participated in our study. Flow cytometric detection of peripheral blood lymphocyte subpopulations together with hemagglutination inhibition antibody titers were measured before and 21-28 days after vaccination. We examined the ratio and total numbers of CD3+, CD4+, CD8+ T cells, activated helper (CD3+CD4+CD25low), regulatory (CD3+CD4+CD25high), naive (CD3+CD45RA+) and memory (CD3+CD45RO+) T cells, CD56+NK, and CD3+CD56+ (NKT-like) cells. Relationships between specific antibody responses (seroprotection, seroconversion, geometric mean titer (GMT), geometric mean fold increase (GMFI)) and the ratios and counts of lymphocyte subpopulations were evaluated using one-way ANOVA and the paired sample t test after dichotomization according to age-related reference values.ResultsPatients with CD4+ lymphocyte levels in the normal age-specific range showed significantly better response regarding postvaccination GMT elevation for H1N1 and H3N2 strains (97.52 vs. 19.2, p=0.019, 80 vs. 14.43, p=0.021, respectively). GMFI results were significant only against B strain (2.69-fold vs. 1.23-fold, p=0.046). Prevaccination CD3+CD56+ (NKT-like) cells above predicted values according to age showed significant associations both in postvaccination GMT elevation (H1N1: 75.11 vs. 14.14, p=0.010; H3N2: 62.18 vs. 11.22, p=0.012; B: 22.69 vs. 6.67, p=0.043) and GMFI against all three strains (H1N1: 3.76-fold vs. 1.06-fold, p=0.015; H3N2: 2.74-fold vs. 1, p=0.013; B: 2.57-fold vs. 1, p=0.008). By one-way ANOVA, we found a positive relation between absolute lymphocyte cell count above 1000/µl and the postvaccination GMT elevation against H3N2 (12.81 vs. 56.56, p=0.032), and GMFI regarding H1N1 (1.22-fold vs. 3.48-fold, p=0.044).ConclusionsIn addition to verifying the predictive value of absolute lymphocyte count above 1000/µl, our results suggest an association between NKT-like cell counts and the specific antibody response against all three investigated influenza strains in highly immunosuppressed patients. Furthermore, prevaccination CD4+ lymphocyte levels in the normal age-specific range may influence seroresponse.
topic influenza vaccines
pediatrics
immunosuppression
natural killer T-cells
lymphocyte subsets
cellular immunity
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2021.690940/full
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