Title: Prevention of infection 2 Immuno and chemoprophylaxis
1Prevention of infection 2Immuno- and
chemoprophylaxis
- Mark Pallen
- With help from
- S. Marlowe
- Matthias Maiwald
2History
Mims C et al. Medical Microbiology. 2004.
3Terms
- Immunization conferring immunity by artificial
means - Vaccination conferring immunity to a disease
using a vaccine or special antigenic material to
stimulate the formation of appropriate antibodies - Vaccine preparation of antigenic material
stimulates Ab production confers active
immunity vs. disease - Latin vacca cow (from cowpox)
4Immunization
- Using vaccines or antibody-containing
preparations to provide immune protection vs.
specific diseases - Passive
- Preformed antibodies - another host
- Protect individual exposed to disease
- Active (vaccines)
- Modified / purified pathogens or their products
- Stimulate host to produce own specific immunity
5Passive Immunization
- IgG - immediate protection - no memory
- Standard Igs (human, animals) Non-specific
- Pooled plasma from donors
- Igs vs. many common viruses
-
- Human hyperimmune serum (high titre) Specific
- From donor c. high titre Abs to specific virus
- Against specific (single) virus
6Passive Immunization
- Indications
- Exposure has occurred, or is expected to occur
soon - No effective vaccine exists or time reqd too
short - Underlying illness prevents admin. vaccine
- E.g. uses
- Standard Ig Congenit./acq. Ig deficiency,
prevent Hep A - Rabies Ig (HRIg) post-exposure prophylaxis
- VZ Ig post-exposure prophylaxis if at high risk
- CMV Ig passive imm. renal transplant recipient
7Passive Immunization
Mims C et al. Medical Microbiology. 1998.
8Vaccines - Active
- Injection of viable / non-viable pathogens or
purified pathogen products - Response as if being attacked by intact organism
- Live / inactivated / DNA vaccines
- Effective starting after 2 wks to few months
- Prolonged immunity lt-- own antibodies produced
9From Vaccine brochure, SmithKline Beecham
10Antibody-mediated (humoral) immune response
From Vaccine brochure, SmithKline Beecham
11Active immunization
Penetrate cells - intracell. Ag processing to
surface of cells - cytotoxic T cell response
- Formulations
- Live pathogens attenuated
- Killed micro-orgs
- Microbial extracts
- Vaccine conjugates
- Toxoids
Do not enter host cells 1ary B cell-mediated
humoral response
12Primary andsecondary immune response and
Boostereffect
From Vaccine brochure, SmithKline Beecham
13Active vaccine - Live attenuated pathogens
- Multiplies inside human host provides strong
antigenic stimulation - Provides prolonged immunity (yrs to life), often
with single dose - Vaccine often provides cell-meditated immunity
- Disadvantage can revert to virulent form
- --gt Do not give to immunocomprom., pregnant
14Active - Killed micro-organism
- Does not multiply in human host
- Immune response depends on Ag content of vaccine
- Multiple doses of vaccine required with
subsequent booster doses - Provides little cell-mediated immunity
- No possibility of a vaccine-assoc. infection
15Active - Microbial extracts
- Extracted molecules (Ags)
- from pathogen
- from acellular (non-infectious) filtrate of
culture medium in which org. grown - recombinant DNA techniques
- Vaccines can be prepared with toxoids
(derivatives of exotoxins) - Used when pathogenicity of org. is due to
secreted toxin - E.g., tetanus, diphtheria
16Active - Conjugated vaccines
- Covalent binding (conjugation) of an antigenic
polysaccharide to a protein higher Ab titres
than unconj. polysacc. - Esp. children lt 2yrs
- E.g.
- Hib conjugate (polysacc. conjugated to diphtheria
toxoid protein) - Meningococcal type C polysaccaride conjugate
17Active - Toxoids
- Derivatives of bacterial exotoxins
- Rendered non-toxic
- But remain immunogenic
- Admin IM, SC
- E.g.
- Tetanus
- Diphtheria
18Vaccine components
19Properties, advantages and disadvantages of live
vs. non-live vaccines
Mims C et al. Medical Microbiology. 1998.
20Vaccines vs. bacterial Diseases
- Pneumococcus (Streptococcus pneumoniae)
- 2 types of vaccines
- Pneumococcal polysaccharide (23-valent, i.e.,
against 23 bacterial capsule types) - Pneumococcal polysacc.-protein conjugate
(7-valent covers children lt 2 yrs)
21Vaccines vs. bacterial diseases
- Meningitis (Neisseria meniningitis)
- Capsular polysaccharide (4 serotypes of Neiss.
men. A, C, W135, Y) - --gt Indications Campus, military, outbreak
- Capsular polysacch.-protein conjugate (serotype
C of Neiss. men.) - --gt For children
22Vaccines vs. bacterial diseases
- Tetanus (Clostridium tetani)
- Tetanus toxoid
- Indications
- Young child
- Booster (10 yrs)
- Suspected exposure (e.g., dirty wound) -- then
with immunoglobulin
23Vaccines vs. viral diseases
- Hepatitis A inactivated whole virus
- Hepatitis B recombinant Hep B SAg
- Varicella-Zoster (live)
- Polio
- Inactivated polio virus (Salk vaccine)
- Attenuated live polio virus (Sabin vaccine)
- Influenza inactivated
- MMR (measles/mumps/rubella) live atten.
24Vaccines vs. polio
- Attenuated live (Sabin)
- Advantages
- Admin. PO
- Life-long protection gt95 after 3 doses
- Early GI tract immunity
- Disadvantage
- Risk of infection 1 / 2.4 million doses
- Inactivated virus (Salk)
- Advantages
- Safe in immunocomprom.
- No risk of infection
- Disadvantages
- Administration injection only (IM)
- Less GI immunity ? asympt. infection of GI
tract c. wild virus
25DNA vaccines
- Gene for protein confers protective resistance -
cloned into bacterial plasmid - Plasmid injected enters host cell
- Remains as episome
- Gene expressed
- Translated into antigenic proteins
- Antigenic protein presented to immune response
Th1 Th2 responses
26DNA vaccines
Gene for antigenic protein
Vaccine plasmid
Host cell
(1)
Antigenic protein
(2)
Free Ag
(4)
mRNA
Nucleus of host cell
Cleavage
(3)
Antigenic peptide
Cellular DNA
MHC 1
Fragment of antigenic peptide
T cell response
Humoral response
27Future combined cloned vaccines?
Mims C et al. Medical Microbiology. 1998.
28Age Immunity
- Passive immunity from mother
- Maternal IgG passes the placenta
- Before and at birth IgG present
- Breast milk secretory Abs (GI resp. tract)
- Active Immunization
- Infant begins to produce Abs in 1st yr
- Start immunization at 2 months (usually)
- Elderly --gt weaker immune response
29Problems with vaccines
- Localized - at site of injection
- Anaphylaxis to Ag or non-microbial content
vaccine (eggs) - Contamination with pathogen
- Reversion of attenuation
- Lack of efficacy if another concurrent infection
(rubella polio vaccine) - Organisms with lots of serotypes
30Vaccine development
- Properties of good candidate
- Organism causes significant illness
- Organism 1 serotype
- Organism no oncogenic potential
- Antibodies block infection / systemic spread
- Vaccine heat stable
31Success of immunization program
- Composition of vaccine
- Life-long immunity
- Administration
- Timing
- Site
- Conditions
32Immunization - ? When
- Birth - Hep B
- Childhood - DTP, Polio, Hep B (2,4,6/12),
Hib (2,4,12), MMR (12/12), DT (15 -19yrs) - Adult - Boosters, 50yrs DT (unless
booster lt10 yrs) - Travellers - Yellow fever, Typhoid
- Non-immune ? - MMR
- Risky lifestyle - Hep B, Heb A
- Aboriginal gt50yrs Influenza (yearly),
- or non-Abor gt 65 yrs - Pneumococcus (5-yearly)
33Standard vaccination schedule
For footnotes, see http//www.dh.sa.gov.au/pehs/I
mmunisation/aust-vacc-schedule-web.pdf From
http//www.dh.sa.gov.au/pehs/communicable-diseases
-index.htm
34Other target groups
From Vaccine brochure, SmithKline Beecham
35Challenges
- Predicting the protective ags
- e.g., Influenza (haemagglutinin neuraminidase
variants) - Not knowing the virulence determinants
- e.g., Tuberculosis
- Antigenic variation
- Promoting T-cell stimulation
36Chemoprophylaxis
- Aimed at preventing infection
- Primary prophylaxis
- Distinct from early treatment
- Or relapse
- Secondary prophylaxis
37Principles of chemoprophylaxis
- As narrow a specturm as possible
- Choice should be based on known or likely target
- As short as possible
- single dose unless evidence to contrary
38Surgical prophylaxis
- Only if bacterial contamination or spillage of
normal flora - e.g. bowel surgery, amputation
- OR
- Implantation of foreign body
- e.g. hip replacment
- Otherwise poor evidence base!
- Timing is important
- Maximum tissue levels during op.
- Avoid post-op. dosing
39Endocarditis prophylaxis
- To prevent endocarditis
- Susceptible people
- Damaged or artificial valves
- Risky procedures
- Dental, GI, GU, resp surgery
- Poor evidence base
- Recommendations in BNF
40Other Chemoprophylaxis
- For contacts of a case
- Meningitis
- meningococcal and H. influenzae
- TB
- Diphtheria
- HIV
- Chickenpox
- In immunocompromised
- Primary chemoprophylaxis
- Pneumocystis, Toxoplasma, Candida, CMV, HSV, gut
decontamination - Penicillin in asplenics etc
- Secondary Prophylaxis
- Pneumocystis, Cryptococcus
- In primary immunodeficiency, anti-staph
prophylaxis