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Impact of maternal antibodies and microbiota development on the immunogenicity of oral rotavirus vaccine in African, Indian, and European infants: a prospective cohort study

Authors :
Edward P.K. Parker
Valsan Philip Verghese
Deborah Howarth
Sidhartha Giri
Blossom Benny
Nigel A. Cunliffe
Nedson Chasweka
Christina Bronowski
Sudhir Babji
Beate Kampmann
Annai Gunasekaran
End Chinyama
Bakthavatsalam Sandya Rani
Khuzwayo C. Jere
Kulandaipalayam Natarajan Sindhu
Srinivasan Venugopal
Sophia Silas
Nicholas C. Grassly
Sushil Immanuel
Gagandeep Kang
Jonathan Mandolo
Ira Praharaj
Jenna Lowe
Miren Iturriza-Gomara
Queen Dube
Vivek Kumar Srinivasan
Alistair C. Darby
Mark D. Turner
Noelia Carmona-Vicente
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

Identifying risk factors for impaired oral rotavirus vaccine (ORV) efficacy in low-income countries may lead to improvements in vaccine design and delivery. We measured maternal rotavirus antibodies, environmental enteric dysfunction (EED), and bacterial gut microbiota development among infants receiving two doses of Rotarix in India (n = 307), Malawi (n = 119), and the UK (n = 60), using standardised methods across cohorts. ORV shedding and seroconversion rates were significantly lower in Malawi and India than the UK. Maternal rotavirus-specific antibodies in serum and breastmilk were negatively correlated with ORV response in India and Malawi, and this was mediated partly by a reduction in ORV replication. In the UK, ORV replication was not inhibited despite comparable maternal antibody levels. In both India and Malawi, pre-vaccination microbiota diversity was negatively correlated with ORV immunogenicity, suggesting that high early-life microbial exposure may contribute to impaired vaccine efficacy.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a47a01971bc39a8892038f8455efc2a9