News

Low IgG1/high IgG4 ratios seen in pregnancy may alter flu vaccine response


 

References

“A subset of these women had this very high IgG4 and low IgG1 response, and this suggests a Th2/Treg influence. This unique isotype profile was not found in any nonpregnant women,” she said, adding that very few pregnant women in their second or third trimester make the high IgG1/low IgG4 that should provide a good response to flu vaccine.

Although Dr. Schlaudecker acknowledged that 80%-90% of the pregnant women in the study had protective HAI titers after immunization, she said the findings have important implications.

“I’m concerned that these low IgG1/high IgG4 ratios seen in pregnant women might actually be giving poor protection against flu infection, which brings us back to the pediatric patients. If pregnant women are not protected well, we are not protecting the babies as well. This suggests that we might need to reconsider approaches to timing of flu vaccine or actually the particular vaccines that we give to pregnant women, and it also shows that pregnancy likely effects systemic responses to things like flu vaccine and other vaccines,” she said.

Dr. Schlaudecker reported having no disclosures.

Pages

Recommended Reading

DeSalvo leaves post to focus on Ebola response
MDedge Pediatrics
Guidelines for children’s bronchiolitis treatment issued by AAP
MDedge Pediatrics
Consider strep, not MRSA, when eczematous children suffer skin infections
MDedge Pediatrics
Post-PCV13 findings prompt continued surveillance
MDedge Pediatrics
Dengue, West Nile threaten to set up housekeeping in U.S.A.
MDedge Pediatrics
DeSalvo to stay involved in health IT work
MDedge Pediatrics
Rise in Clostridium difficile, especially among kids
MDedge Pediatrics
FDA approves Trumenba vaccine for serogroup B meningitis
MDedge Pediatrics
Avoid misdiagnosing pediatric viral myocarditis
MDedge Pediatrics
How to know when a recurrent infection signals something more
MDedge Pediatrics