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Antibody response to primary and booster immunization in infants born to mothers immunized with pertussis-containing vaccines during pregnancy versus unimmunized women: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Proposal
11280
Title of Proposed Research
Antibody response to primary and booster immunization in infants born to mothers immunized with pertussis-containing vaccines during pregnancy versus unimmunized women: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Lead Researcher
Dr. Manish Sadarangani
Affiliation
University of British Columbia, Canada
Funding Source
Potential Conflicts of Interest
Data Sharing Agreement Date
18 June 2020
Lay Summary
Background: Pertussis (or whooping cough) is a highly contagious respiratory illness caused by a type of bacteria called Bordetella pertussis. Despite high vaccination coverage against pertussis among children, there have been recent outbreaks of B. pertussis with accompanying morbidity and mortality. Infants during their first months of life have the highest rates of laboratory confirmed pertussis cases and nearly all fatalities occur in infants younger than three months of age. In an attempt to protect infants too young to be vaccinated and those who have not yet completed their primary immunization series, antenatal immunization against pertussis have been implemented. Immunization during pregnancy has the potential to curtail infectious disease morbidity and mortality of pregnant women and their offspring by reducing the risk of transmission of infectious pathogens and enhancing the transfer of vaccine-specific antibodies from the mother to her newborn. Immunization against pertussis during pregnancy is an increasingly accepted public health preventative strategy and is currently recommended in the United States, UK, Australia and other countries. There is controversy whether high maternally-derived antibody titers induced by antenatal immunization against pertussis can have a suppressive effect on infants' immune responses to their own immunizations. Immunization against pertussis is expected to be implemented in increasing number of countries; thus, the gaps in knowledge must be addressed to inform an evidence-based immunization program.This systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis aims to fill this knowledge gap. This review will describe infants' active immune response to their own vaccination following their mothers' immunization with pertussis-containing vaccines during pregnancy. The objective of this study is to evaluate whether immunization against pertussis in pregnancy affects infants' immune responses to their own vaccines administered in infancy
Study Data Provided
[{ "PostingID": 19670, "Title": "GSK-117119", "Description": "Immunogenicity and safety study of GSK Biologicals’ Infanrix hexa at 2, 4 and 6 months of age in healthy infants" },{ "PostingID": 20275, "Title": "GSK-116945", "Description": "Immunogenicity and safety study of GSK Biologicals’ dTpa vaccine, Boostrix™ (263855) in pregnant women" },{ "PostingID": 20276, "Title": "GSK-201330", "Description": "Immunogenicity and safety study of GSK Biologicals’ combined diphtheria-tetanus-acellular pertussis-hepatitis B-inactivated polio-virus and Haemophilus influenzae type b vaccine (Infanrix hexa™) (217744) in healthy infants born to mothers vaccinated with Boostrix™ during pregnancy or immediately post-delivery" }]
Statistical Analysis Plan
In order to assess primary outcome, a mixed effects model will be used. This is a powerful tool that enables combing data from different studies. Using this model, we will adjust for co-variates that were shown to affect immune response to vaccination according to previous systematic literature review (Zimmermann et al. Clinical Microbiology Reviews 2019). The output of this model will be the geometric mean ratio (GMR) of antibody levels prior and after immunization. The GMR is the ratio of Abs in infants born to women immunized in pregnancy vs. unimmunized women (a GMR of ≥ 1 indicates no interference, a GMR of <1 interference). In addition, each individual dataset from each individual study included will be coded and given a specific code, to maintain the integrity of the original data by trial level. This variable will also serve as a grouping factor in the model. To address secondary outcomes 1 and 2, a chi-square test will be used to determine whether the percentage of protected infants (or pregnant women) is different in the 2 groups (those born to pertussis-immunized vs pertussis-unimmunized women). In this analysis, we will be using well-established sero-protective cut offs for specific vaccine-induced antibodies (e.g. for streptococcus pneumonia). This analysis is important as it will determine whether immunization against pertussis in pregnancy results in lower percentage of protected infants (e.g. 50% vs 70% in infants born to vaccinated mothers compared to unvaccinated mothers, p-value xx, chi-square test). To address secondary outcome 3, we will calculate the fold change in antibody levels after vs before immunization in infancy. This will be performed in the 2 groups (infants born to vaccinated vs unvaccinated mothers). The fold change values will be assessed for normality (preliminary results based on the already included studies showed normal distribution). If normal distribution is still maintained (as more datasets are added to the analysis) then t-test will be used to determine whether the fold change of antibody levels (after vs before immunization) is significant between infants born to pertussis- immunized vs -unimmunzed pregnant women (e.g. 5 vs 10 fold change in infants born to vaccinated vs unvaccinated women, p=yy, t-test). To address secondary outcome 4, a mixed-effect model will be used (based on Voysey et al, JAMA Pediatrics 2017; PMID: 28505244), in which co-varites that could have affected immune response to vaccination in infants will be entered. The aim of this analysis is to determine factors that can mitigate the effect of blunting. The output of this model is GMR which indicates the relative increase (fold rise) in antibody levels in response to vaccination associated with 1 unit change in a co-variate (examples of co-variates will be timing of initiation of primary vaccination series in infants, antibody levels at time of primary vaccination). Example of outcome of the model will be: the relative increase in antibody response is 10% for a 1-week older infant.
Publication Citation
Abu-Raya B, Maertens K, Munoz FM, Zimmermann P, Curtis N, Halperin SA, Rots N, Barug D, Holder B, Kampmann B, Leuridan E, Sadarangani M. The Effect of Tetanus-Diphtheria-Acellular-Pertussis Immunization During Pregnancy on Infant Antibody Responses: Individual-Participant Data Meta-Analysis. Front Immunol. 2021 Jul 6;12:689394.
doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.689394.
PMID: 34305922; PMCID: PMC8299947.
Abu-Raya B, Maertens K, Munoz FM, Zimmermann P, Curtis N, Halperin SA, Rots N, Barug D, Holder B, Rice TF, Kampmann B, Leuridan E, Sadarangani M. Factors affecting antibody responses to immunizations in infants born to women immunized against pertussis in pregnancy and unimmunized women: Individual-Participant Data Meta-analysis. Vaccine. 2021 Oct 22;39(44):6545-6552. Epub 2021 Sep 29.
doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2021.09.022.
PMID: 34598822.
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