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Boosting effect of high-dose influenza vaccination on innate immunity among elderly
Olivia Bonduelle, … , Behazine Combadiere, Cécile Janssen
Olivia Bonduelle, … , Behazine Combadiere, Cécile Janssen
Published March 4, 2025
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2025;10(8):e184128. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.184128.
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Clinical Research and Public Health Immunology Vaccines

Boosting effect of high-dose influenza vaccination on innate immunity among elderly

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Abstract

BACKGROUND The high-dose quadrivalent influenza vaccine (QIV-HD) showed superior efficacy against laboratory-confirmed illness compared with the standard-dose quadrivalent influenza vaccine (QIV-SD) in randomized controlled trials with the elderly. However, specific underlying mechanism remains unclear.METHODS This phase IV randomized controlled trial compared early innate responses induced by QIV-HD and QIV-SD in 59 individuals aged > 65 years. Systemic innate cells and gene signatures at day 0 (D0) and D1 as well as hemagglutinin inhibition antibody (HIA) titers at D0 and D21 after vaccination were assessed.RESULTS QIV-HD elicited robust humoral response with significantly higher antibody titers and seroconversion rates than QIV-SD. At D1 after vaccination, QIV-HD recipients showed significant reduction in innate cells, including conventional DCs and NK cells, compared with QIV-SD, correlating with significantly increased HIA titers at D21. Blood transcriptomic analysis revealed greater amplitude of gene expression in the QIV-HD arm, encompassing genes related to innate immune response, IFNs, and antigen processing and presentation, and correlated with humoral responses. Interestingly, comparative analysis with a literature dataset from young adults vaccinated with influenza standard-dose vaccine highlighted strong similarities in gene expression patterns and biological pathways with the elderly vaccinated with QIV-HD.CONCLUSION QIV-HD induces higher HIA titers than QIV-SD, a youthful boost of the innate gene expression significantly associated with high HIA titers.TRIAL REGISTRATION EudraCT no. 2021-004573-32.

Authors

Olivia Bonduelle, Tristan Delory, Isabelle Franco-Moscardini, Marion Ghidi, Selma Bennacer, Michele Wokam, Mathieu Lenormand, Melissa Petrier, Olivier Rogeaux, Simon de Bernard, Karine Alves, Julien Nourikyan, Bruno Lina, INFLUOMICS Study group, Behazine Combadiere, Cécile Janssen

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Figure 1

Study protocol and immunogenicity of QIV-HD compared with QIV-SD in adults ≥ 65 years old.

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Study protocol and immunogenicity of QIV-HD compared with QIV-SD in adul...
(A) Schematic overview of experiment with kinetics of biological sample collection including serum collection and whole blood cells for transcriptomic and innate cell phenotype analyses. (B) Dot plots present geometric mean titers (GMT) with 95% CI of anti–A H1N1 hemagglutination inhibition antibody (HIA) titers, anti–A H3N2 HIA titers, anti–B Victoria HIA titers, and anti–B Yamagata HIA titers at D0, D21, D90, and D210 after QIV-SD (green) or QIV-HD (violet) vaccination. The horizontal line represents the seroprotection cut off with HIA titers at 40. Wilcoxon tests and Fisher’s exact tests were performed to compare the characteristics of the 2 groups (**P <0.01).

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