Maternal and Infant Histo-Blood Group Antigen (HBGA) Profiles and Their Influence on Oral Rotavirus Vaccine (RotarixTM) Immunogenicity among Infants
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Vaccines
Abstract
Live-attenuated, oral rotavirus vaccines have significantly reduced rotavirus-associated
diarrhoea morbidity and infant mortality. However, vaccine immunogenicity is diminished in lowincome
countries. We investigated whether maternal and infant intrinsic susceptibility to rotavirus
infection via histo-blood group antigen (HBGA) profiles influenced rotavirus (ROTARIX®) vaccineinduced
responses in Zambia. We studied 135 mother–infant pairs under a rotavirus vaccine clinical
trial, with infants aged 6 to 12 weeks at pre-vaccination up to 12 months old. We determined maternal
and infant ABO/H, Lewis, and secretor HBGA phenotypes, and infant FUT2 HBGA genotypes.
Vaccine immunogenicity was measured as anti-rotavirus IgA antibody titres. Overall, 34 (31.3%)
children were seroconverted at 14 weeks, and no statistically significant difference in seroconversion
was observed across the various HBGA profiles in early infant life. We also observed a statistically
significant difference in rotavirus-IgA titres across infant HBGA profiles at 12 months, though no
statistically significant difference was observed between the study arms. There was no association
between maternal HBGA profiles and infant vaccine immunogenicity. Overall, infant HBGAs were
associated with RV vaccine immunogenicity at 12 months as opposed to in early infant life. Further
investigation into the low efficacy of ROTARIX® and appropriate intervention is key to unlocking the
full vaccine benefits for U5 children.
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Chauwa, A.; Bosomprah, S.; Laban, N.M.; Phiri, B.; Chibuye, M.; Chilyabanyama, O.N.; Munsaka, S.; Simuyandi, M.; Mwape, I.; Mubanga, C.; et al. Maternal and Infant Histo-Blood Group Antigen (HBGA) Profiles and Their Influence on Oral Rotavirus Vaccine (RotarixTM) Immunogenicity among Infants in Zambia. Vaccines 2023, 11, 1303. https://doi.org/10.3390/ vaccines11081303