Naturally-induced serum antibody levels in children to pneumococcal polysaccharide 15B that correlate with protection from nasopharyngeal colonization but anti-serotype 15B antibody has low functional cross-reactivity with serotype 15C

Department

Research

Document Type

Article

Publication Title

Vaccine

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Serotypes 15B and 15C have been added to new different pneumococcal-conjugate vaccines (PCV20 and V116, respectively). We determined a serum anti-15B antibody level that would be a correlate of protection (COP) against nasopharyngeal colonization and assessed functional cross-reactivity against serotype 15B and 15C in children following natural immunization.

METHOD: IgG-antibody to serotype 15B polysaccharide was measured by ELISA in 341 sera from 6 to 36 month old children collected before, at the time of, and after pneumococcal colonization caused by serotypes 15B and 15C. 155 age-matched controls who had no detected colonization caused by serotype 15B or 15C strains were used as controls. A two-step method was used for construction of COP models: a generalized estimating equation followed by logistic-regression. Opsonophagocytic (OPA) assays assessed functional cross-reactivity between serotypes 15B and 15C.

RESULTS: The derived COP for prevention of colonization was 1.18 µg/ml for serotype 15B and 0.63 µg/ml for serotype 15C, with a predictive probability of 80 %. Antibody levels did not correlate with OPA titers. 30 % of child samples, with moderate to high amounts of ELISA-measured antibody, showed no OPA titer against either serotype 15B or 15C. For remaining samples, very low or no functional cross-reactivity between serotypes 15B and 15C was measured.

CONCLUSIONS: A COP for prevention of colonization in young children based on naturally-induced antibody levels was derived for serotypes 15B and 15C that differed. Antibody levels correlated poorly with OPA titers and low functional cross-reactivity between serotypes 15B and 15C in child sera was observed.

First Page

7265

Last Page

7273

DOI

10.1016/j.vaccine.2023.10.054

Volume

41

Issue

48

Publication Date

11-22-2023

Publisher

Elsevier Science

Medical Subject Headings

Humans; Child; Child, Preschool; Infant; Serogroup; Antibodies, Bacterial; Streptococcus pneumoniae; Pneumococcal Vaccines; Polysaccharides; Vaccines, Conjugate; Pneumococcal Infections

PubMed ID

37925318

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