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Clinical and Vaccine Immunology, October 2007, p. 1328-1333, Vol. 14, No. 10
1071-412X/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/CVI.00191-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Immunisation Department, Centre for Infections, Health Protection Agency, London, United Kingdom,1 Statistics, Modelling and Economics Department, Centre for Infections, Health Protection Agency, London, United Kingdom,2 Gloucester Vaccine Evaluation Unit, Health Protection Agency, Gloucester, United Kingdom,3 Immunoassay Laboratory, Centre for Emergency Preparedness and Response, Health Protection Agency, Salisbury, United Kingdom,4 Vaccine and Immunisation Research Group, Murdoch Children's Research Institute and School of Population Health, University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia,5 Immunoassay Laboratory, Institute of Child Health, London, United Kingdom6
Received 9 May 2007/ Returned for modification 10 July 2007/ Accepted 6 August 2007
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FIG. 1. Number of laboratory reports of Hib disease in England and Wales by age, 1990 to 2006 (data are from www.hpa.org.uk).
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Second, estimates of direct protection from the vaccine in the United Kingdom were lower than those predicted from an early intervention study (4), with efficacy waning from 61% in the first 2 years after 3 doses of vaccine in infancy to 27% thereafter (19). In addition, there was evidence of higher efficacy in children vaccinated at 1 to 4 years of age, with a single dose during the catch-up campaign, and less evidence of waning protection over time than in those vaccinated in infancy.
Third, due to shortages of diphtheria/tetanus/whole-cell pertussis/Hib (DTwP/Hib) combination vaccines in late 1999 in the United Kingdom, an acellular pertussis (aP)-containing combination vaccine (DTaP/Hib, Infanrix-Hib) was used instead; this vaccine comprised around 50% of the doses distributed in the United Kingdom over the period of 2000 to 2002 (19). Although some aP-containing combination vaccines have a reduced immunogenicity of the Hib component, particularly when given only 1 month apart (24), these vaccines still induce immunological memory, which was argued to be a more appropriate correlation of protection for a conjugate vaccine (5). However, a case-control study in the United Kingdom showed that infants who received 3 doses of DTaP/Hib were at an 8.4-fold-higher risk of vaccine failure than those fully immunized with DTwP/Hib vaccine (14).
Because of the increased risk of vaccine failure in the DTaP/Hib-vaccinated cohorts and evidence of waning protection even in those vaccinated with DTwP/Hib in infancy (18), the United Kingdom Department of Health offered a booster (fourth) dose of Hib vaccine to all children aged 6 months to 4 years in a catch-up campaign in 2003 (Chief Medical Officer Letter PL CMO (2003)1 [www.dh.gov.uk/en/publicationsandstatistics/lettersandcirculars/professionalletters/chiefmedicalofficerletters/dh_4004814] and Chief Medical Officer Letter PL CMO (2003)2 [www.dh.gov.uk/en/publicationsandstatistics/lettersandcirculars/professionalletters/chiefmedicalofficerletters/dh_4004833]) and, in September 2006, a routine Hib booster was introduced at 12 months of age (Chief Medical Officer Letter PL CMO (2006)1 [www.dh.gov.uk/en/publicationsandstatistics/lettersandcirculars/professionalletters/chiefmedicalofficerletters/dh_4137171]).
The observed population effect of introducing a less immunogenic vaccine suggests that lower levels of circulating antibody are associated with poorer protection. This study is the first to measure the persistence of Hib antibody since priming and the response to a booster dose in children of different ages and varied primary vaccination histories.
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Treatment and follow-up schedule. All participants received a booster dose of single-antigen Hib vaccine conjugated to tetanus toxoid (TT) as used in the national campaign (Hiberix; GlaxoSmithKline). All doses given in the study were from a single batch. The DTP/Hib vaccine that had been given for primary immunization was recorded, together with the batch number/manufacturer of any concomitant meningococcal C conjugate (MCC) vaccine. Three MCC vaccines were in use in the United Kingdom when the study cohort was eligible for primary immunization; two were MCC-CRM (CRM is a nontoxic mutant of the diphtheria toxin isolated from cultures of Corynebacterium diphtheriae) conjugates (Meningitec and Menjugate), and the third was an MCC-TT conjugate (NeisVacC). The MCC-TT vaccine contains the same carrier protein as the Hib vaccine does, and this may affect the response after the primary immunization (13).
Blood samples were collected prior to booster vaccination and at 1 month (±1 week), 6 months (±1 week), 1 year (±1 month), and 2 years (±1 month) later. Serious adverse events were collected throughout the study period.
Serology. Hib-specific antibodies (immunoglobulin G [IgG]) were quantified using a standardized enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) at the Immunoassay Laboratory, Centre for Emergency Preparedness and Response, Health Protection Agency, Porton Down, Wiltshire, England (17). Sera were titrated against an international Hib reference serum (lot 1983; Center for Biologics and Evaluation Research) in which the quantity of specific antibody was known.
To fulfill a duty of care, a further dose of Hiberix was offered to any subject with a Hib IgG concentration 4 to 6 weeks postvaccination below the putative protective threshold of 0.15 µg/ml (12).
Analyses. In all analyses, the outcome of interest was the Hib antibody concentration at the various blood sampling time points and whether this value was at least 0.15 µg/ml (the putative protective level) or more than 1.00 µg/ml (which is considered predictive of longer-term protection [12]). The main explanatory variables of interest were as follows: (i) age at boosting (stratified into 6 to 11 months, 12 to 17 months, and 2 to 4 years), (ii) time from completion of the primary vaccination to obtaining the prebooster blood sample, (iii) number of doses of MCC-TT given as part of the primary immunization schedule, (iv) number of doses of DTwP and DTaP given as part of the primary immunization schedule (only children boosted at 2 to 4 years of age received primary vaccination at a time when DTwP was available), and (v) time from boosting to the retrieval of each subsequent blood sample at about 1 month, 6 months, 1 year, and 2 years.
The age groups were chosen to reflect possible ages at which a fourth dose might be routinely scheduled. Other explanatory variables examined were which particular nurse administered the vaccination, the sex of the patient, and the antibody concentration before the booster.
Within groups of interest, data were analyzed by the calculation of geometric means with 95% CIs and proportions of at least 0.15 µg/ml or of more than 1.00 µg/ml. Groups were compared using a t test/Kruskal-Wallis test (for GMCs) or chi-squared test/Fisher's exact test (for proportions). Results at different time points were compared using paired t tests. Multivariable analysis was performed on log10 titers using normal error regression or, where many results were less than 0.15 µg/milliliter, probit regression. The decline in antibody levels after primary vaccination and booster was also modeled as a function of time since vaccination by using regression.
Sample size. The original recruitment target was 850 individuals (450 children aged 2 to 4 years and 400 children aged 6 to 18 months). This relatively large sample size was based on the outcome measure being the proportion with concentrations of more than 1.0 µg/ml with the aim to detect meaningful differences (e.g., 30% versus 13%, with 80% power at a 5% significance level) in such proportions across ages (as a trend) and according to the DTP vaccines received in infancy. In the 2-month time frame for the campaign, the recruitment was less at 388. This reduced sample size, along with the high proportions achieving concentrations of more than 1.0 µg/ml after the booster, meant that GMCs were used as the main outcome for comparisons. More than 80% power was used to detect twofold differences in GMC across ages and according to vaccine used for priming.
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TABLE 1. Hib IgG GMCs before boosting and after a booster dose of single-antigen Hib vaccine
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TABLE 2. Percentages of children with antibody concentrations of 0.15 µg/ml and >1.0 µg/ml by age at boosting for each blood sample
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FIG. 2. Decline in Hib IgG antibody concentration after primary vaccination with fitted trend line and according to primary MCC vaccination.
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FIG. 3. Hib IgG geometric mean concentrations and 95% CIs according to type of Hib combination received for primary immunization and timing of blood sample in children aged 2 to 4 years at time of boosting. Error bars indicate standard deviations.
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Significant declines in antibody concentrations after the booster were seen between sampling points (P < 0.001). As with the decline after the primary immunization, these declines followed a log-log relationship with time and were similar between age groups, with a 53% decline for every twofold change in time since boosting (Fig. 4). This age-independent pattern of decline meant that severalfold differences between age groups after the booster remained similar at each time point, averaging 2.5- and 4.7-fold differences for the groups aged 12 to 17 months and 2 to 4 years, respectively, relative to the group aged 6 to 11 months. We extrapolated the data for the decline in antibody levels to 4 years after boosting to give predicted geometric means of 0.6, 1.4, and 2.6 µg/ml for those boosted at 6 to 11 months, 12 to 17 months, and 2 to 4 years, respectively (Fig. 4). It is also predicted that at 4 years after the booster, no more than 10% of individuals would have levels below 0.15 µg/ml irrespective of age at boosting. The decline after the booster was more rapid than the 42% seen after the primary vaccination, but the higher initial concentrations meant that concentrations remained at a higher level.
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FIG. 4. Decline in Hib IgG antibody concentration by age at boosting and by the time since boosting with fitted trend lines.
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One child who was vaccinated at 7 months of age was given an extra dose in line with the protocol and did not attend for subsequent sample collection.
No effect of which nurse administered the vaccine or of the sex of the vaccinee was found in the multivariable regression analyses.
Serious adverse events. No serious adverse events were recorded in the period of 4 to 6 weeks following vaccination. Hospitalizations during the trial, for rotaviral enteritis and Henoch-Schonlein purpura at 20 months and 26 months after Hib vaccination, respectively, were deemed unrelated to the vaccination.
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Previous United Kingdom studies of Hib antibody persistence after infant immunization at 2, 3, and 4 months have also found higher levels after primary immunization with DTwP/Hib than DTaP/Hib. Johnson et al. measured antibody concentrations in 2 to 4 year olds prior to their receiving a booster in the 2003 campaign; the GMC in DTwP/Hib recipients was 0.61 µg/ml (95% CI, 0.41 to 0.92), compared with 0.30 µg/ml (95% CI, 0.19 to 0.49) in DTaP/Hib recipients (11). These levels are remarkably close to those reported here. In two previous studies by our group in the same Hertfordshire and Gloucestershire populations in 1996 to 1997, 401 infants vaccinated with DTwP/Hib had a Hib GMC of 0.41 (95% CI, 0.35 to 0.47) at 12 to 18 months of age (6), with a significantly lower GMC of 0.25 (95% CI, 0.21 to 0.30) among 120 DTaP/Hib vaccinees bled at a median age of 16 months (7). While the severalfold differences between DTwP/HIb and DTaP/Hib groups are similar in the various studies (around two- to threefold), the absolute levels are significantly higher in the more recent cohorts. This difference was not explained by augmentation of the initial Hib response by concomitant MCC-TT, as this effect did not persist past the first year of life. It may therefore reflect a greater opportunity for natural boosting through carriage in the more recent cohorts who were followed up during a period of Hib resurgence. This result is supported by the findings of Johnson et al. (11), who swabbed children before they received the booster and found a pharyngeal carriage rate of 2.1%, with a further 4.5% of children with high antibody levels suggestive of recent boosting through colonization. Studies of Hib antibody concentrations and disease incidence in adults over the period of 1991 to 2003 also suggest an important role for boosting through carriage in determining population immunity (16).
The approximate twofold difference in antibody levels of less than 0.15 µg/ml persisting since priming between DTwP/Hib and DTaP/Hib recipients seems inconsistent with an 8.4-fold difference in the risk of vaccine failure as reported by McVernon et al. (14). However, a more recent case-control study of host and environmental risk factors for Hib disease in which controls were matched by district of residence found a lower odds ratio of 2.88 (95% CI, 0.99 to 8.37) for the risk of vaccine failure in DTaP/Hib compared with the ratio for DTwP/Hib recipients, which is more in line with the difference in immunogenicity (J. McVernon, personal communication).
The height of the antibody response and persistence after boosting were shown to be related to the age at administration, with better responses in those boosted after the first year of life. However, irrespective of the age at boosting, almost all children had antibody concentrations of at least 0.15 µg/ml 2 years after boosting, with around 90% predicted to be above this level at 4 years. This proportion is similar to that reported in a recent study of 341 children in Germany in which Hib antibody persistence was assessed 3 years after a fourth booster dose of a DTaP/Hib vaccine combined with hepatitis B and inactivated poliovirus vaccine given in the second year of life. This formulation contained the same Hib component vaccine as that used in the present study, and encouragingly, more than 90% of the children had antibody levels persisting above the putative protective level of at least 0.15 µg/ml (9).
The log-log relationship observed in all age groups between antibody decline and time since vaccination with an initial rapid decline, followed by a more gradual fall, suggests that the underlying biological mechanism of antibody persistence is similar. The decline in antibody levels with time since priming also followed a log-log relationship, albeit at a lower level than the booster curves. The initial rapid decline in antibody titers could be due to the dominance of the early response by short-lived plasma cells (half-life of 3 to 14 days in mice) that produce antibody shortly after antigen exposure (10). Some plasma cells have a longer half-life (typically 3 to 4 months in mouse models [21]) and these, together with memory B cells, may be responsible for maintaining serum antibody levels over a longer period of time. It is still not clear what the stimulus might be for the ongoing secretion of antigen-specific antibody, but this might be due to bystander stimulation of memory B cells by unrelated antigens (3) or by the encounter with antigen (perhaps via nasopharyngeal carriage) over time (8). Persistence of antibody may thus partly rely on the presence of immunological memory, although both vaccine-induced and natural priming for memory against Hib in the absence of circulating antibody may still leave an individual vulnerable to infection (1). Higher antibody titers were reached in older individuals following boosting, which may be due to natural maturation of the immune system, and were reflected in a higher number of B cells being recruited and more robust memory being laid down, although the mechanisms responsible for this remain elusive. Higher titers may, however, translate into greater persistence of clinical protection, as has been seen for meningococcal C conjugate in the United Kingdom (22).
It is hoped that the routine Hib booster now being given in the second year of life will prevent a future resurgence of disease as seen in the United Kingdom in 1999 to 2002. The clinical protection achieved by the new booster program will be evaluated, which, in conjunction with antibody persistence and carriage studies, will contribute to improving our understanding of the role of vaccination and natural boosting in determining population immunity.
We thank the Department of Health Research and Development Directorate for financial support of this study under grant 1217470.
Published ahead of print on 15 August 2007. ![]()
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