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New
Vaccine Shows Promise for COPD Patients at
Risk for Pneumonia
Newswise
— A new vaccine against pneumonia may offer
better protection from chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease (COPD) patients than the
currently accepted vaccine, according to
recent research that will be published in
the September 15 issue of the American
Journal of the Respiratory and Critical Care
Journal, a publication of the American
Thoracic Society.
Because pneumonia disproportionately affects
patients with COPD and frequently causes
exacerbations, the Centers for Disease
Control currently recommend that all adults
with COPD receive the 23-valent pneumococcal
polysaccharide vaccination (PPSV23).
However, the efficacy of PPSV23 is not well
established in the COPD patient population.
“Reasonable effectiveness for this vaccine
has been demonstrated in cohort studies in
adults with lung disease,” said Mark
Dransfield, M.D. of the University of
Alabama at Birmingham and lead author of the
study.
“[However,] debate remains about its
immunogenicity and effectiveness in COPD.”
Dr. Dransfield and colleagues sought to
determine the efficacy of a newer type of
vaccine, PCV7, a protein conjugate vaccine,
which attaches a weak antigen (in this case,
the pneumococcal polysaccharide antigen) to
a stronger antigen (the diphtheria toxin) in
the hope that the stronger antigen with
provoke a more forceful defense from the
immune system.
“Conjugated vaccines were originally
intended for young children who respond
poorly to polysaccharide antigens,” said Dr.
Dransfield.
“We wanted to see whether they could have a
similar effect in the COPD patient
population in whom immune responses may also
be blunted.”
Results of the randomized open label trial
of 120 adults with moderate to severe COPD
showed that, while both the PPSV23 vaccine
and the PCV7 vaccine were well-tolerated,
the PCV7 vaccine produced superior immune
responses on several measures of
immunogenicity.
Among patients randomized to take the PCV7
vaccine, the fraction exhibiting a twofold
increase in serotype-specific IgG antibodies
was higher in five of the seven serotypes
tested. Blood drawn from patients who had
received the PCV7 vaccine was also more
effective at killing pneumococci in six of
seven serotypes tested one month after
vaccination.
“We have shown that PCV7 induces a superior
immune response to PPSV23 in COPD at one
month post-vaccination,” concluded Dr.
Dransfield.
“Both vaccines elicit responses comparable
to those previous observed in health elderly
patients.”
Older age and prior vaccination with PPSV23
dampened the efficacy of the PCV7 vaccine,
however.
A vaccine in development that contains the
capsule of 13 pneumococcal serotypes, called
PCV13 (compared to PCV7 which has seven) is
hoped to expand the coverage of the vaccine.
“We hope that future research will confirm
the superior immunogenicity of PCV13 in COPD,”
he added.
“We also want to determine the relative
duration of the immune response following
PPSV23 and conjugate vaccination and to
identify the immunologic correlates of
protection against both invasive and
non-invasive pneumococcal disease.
"We
believe our data provide the rationale for
further study of the clinical efficacy of
protein-conjugate pneumococcal vaccines in
the high risk COPD population.”
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