An interesting paper by. Katerinis et al.
recently investigated the role of vaccination with the adjuvanted H1N1 vaccine
in causing the production of anti – HLA antibodies in kidney transplant
recipients.
This study was carried out in four
cohorts of patients in Switzerland, 92 transplant recipients who had HLA
antibodies checked before and 6 weeks after H1N1 vaccine, 59 transplant
recipients who had been tested for HLA antibody up to 6 weeks before
vaccination then again 4-8 weeks after, patients on the wait list for renal
transplantation and a historical cohort from 2008 who never received the H1N1
vaccine. In the first two cohorts 17.3%
and 11.9% of patients developed anti-HLA antibodies (some donor specific while
some were not) verses no patients in cohort III and 6.1% of patients in the
historical cohort. Six months after
immunization the antibodies disappeared in the majority of patients. There were two events that could have been
attributed to the antibodies: one patient who developed a C4d negative
thrombotic angiopathy in the kidney and another patient who developed antibody
mediated rejection (however, authors report that he was non-compliant with his
immunosuppression).
This is the first study in which
antibody responses after H1N1 influenza vaccination led to a significant degree
of HLA-antibodies. The authors point out
possible explanations including shared epitopes between influenza hemagglutinin
and neuraminidase in the vaccine and HLA proteins, HLA antigens triggering a
B-cell response toward the vaccine antigens, nonspecific reactions between
vaccine antibodies and the antibody detection assay, and the adjuvanted vaccine
triggering allosensitization by stimulating the innate immune system.
Even though there were novo HLA antibodies it is important to note that
the authors do not recommend avoiding the vaccination as influenza in the
transplant patients can be life threatening and the presence of these de novo
antibodies were of low titer and probably not related to clinical events. However this paper supports further studying
the ability of adjuvanted vaccines in causing HLA-antibodies and possibly organ
dysfunction.
Ref: I. Katerinis et
al: De Novo Anti-HLA antibody after pandemic H1N1 and seasonal influenza
immunization in kidney transplant recipients. Am J Transplant 2011;11:1727-1733
Post by Dr.Vinay Nair
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