4.5 Article

Booster vaccination against tetanus and diphtheria: insufficient protection against diphtheria in young and elderly adults

Journal

IMMUNITY & AGEING
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12979-016-0081-0

Keywords

Booster vaccination; Tetanus; Diphtheria; Adults; Elderly

Funding

  1. Oesterreichische Nationalbank (Anniversary Fund) [13,524]
  2. Austrian Science Fund (FWF
  3. doctoral programme HOROS) [W 1253]
  4. European Union's Seventh Framework Programme [FP7] ADITEC [280,873]

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We have recently demonstrated that single shot vaccinations against tetanus and diphtheria do not lead to long-lasting immunity against diphtheria in elderly persons despite administration at 5 year intervals. In the present study we have immunized a group of young adults against tetanus and diphtheria to compare the pre- and 28 days post-vaccination immune responses in the young group with results of the same vaccination performed in an elderly group of a previous study. We also studied protection in both groups 5 years after vaccination. We compared antibody titers at all three time points and also analyzed the T cell responses in both age groups 5 years after vaccination. Before vaccination 9 % of the elderly persons were not protected against tetanus, and 48 % did not have protection against diphtheria. In the young group all participants were protected against tetanus, but 52 % were also unprotected against diphtheria before vaccination. 28 days after vaccination 100 % of all participants had protective antibody concentrations against tetanus and only a small percentage in each age group (< 10 %) was unprotected against diphtheria. 5 years later, 100 % of both cohorts were still protected against tetanus, but 24 % of the young and 54 % of the elderly group were unprotected against diphtheria. Antibody concentrations against diphtheria measured by ELISA correlated well with their neutralizing capacity. T cell responses to tetanus and diphtheria did not differ between young and old persons. We conclude that booster vaccinations against tetanus and diphtheria according to present recommendations provide long-lasting protection only against tetanus, but not against diphtheria, independently of age. In elderly persons, the level of protection is even lower, probably due to intrinsic age-related changes within the immune system and/or insufficient vaccination earlier in life.

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