AI Article Synopsis

  • Pediatric patients with recurrent oto-sinopulmonary infections often show low antibody levels to the pneumococcal vaccine (PCV13), prompting the need for a booster shot.
  • A study of 182 patients found that those who received the PCV13 booster showed a significant increase in protective antibody levels, going from an average of 3.6 to 11.1 serotypes within 6 weeks post-immunization.
  • Most patients experienced positive clinical outcomes, with 81% showing no recurrent infections after the first booster and 94% after a second, indicating the booster is highly effective for children across various ages.

Article Abstract

Low titers to pneumococcal vaccine are a frequent finding in pediatric patients with recurrent oto-sinopulmonary infections. To characterize the pre- and post-immunization antibody trend for each serotype included in the pneumococcal 13-valent conjugate vaccine (PCV13), in a cohort of pediatric patients with recurrent oto-sinopulmonary infections. This retrospective review identified 182 patients with recurrent oto-sinopulmonary infections (131 required an immune workup and 99 had low pneumococcal titers leading to a PCV13 vaccine booster). Baseline pneumococcal serotype-specific antibody titers at initial visit and 6 weeks after the vaccine booster were obtained. An adequate response to the pneumococcal conjugate vaccine was deemed to be a 4-fold increase over baseline and/or a post-immunization titer of 1.3 µg/ml or greater. Overall, PCV13 booster provided a significant improvement in the number of protective titers, increasing from 3.6 serotypes at baseline to 11.1 serotypes at 6 weeks (p < 0.001). This increase correlated with improved clinical outcomes (81% showed no signs of recurrent infection after the first booster and 94% after a second booster). Post-immunization antibody concentrations were significantly higher than at baseline for all serotypes (p< 0.05) and only 8, 9N, and 12F did not exhibit a greater than 4-fold increase (p> 0.05) 6 weeks following booster. There were no differences between patients at different ages in post-immunization titer levels for all serotypes. In pediatric patients with recurrent oto-sinopulmonary infections, an additional pneumococcal booster proved to be effective in the protection of these children against further infections, across all age groups.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cei/uxae086DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Pediatric patients with recurrent oto-sinopulmonary infections often show low antibody levels to the pneumococcal vaccine (PCV13), prompting the need for a booster shot.
  • A study of 182 patients found that those who received the PCV13 booster showed a significant increase in protective antibody levels, going from an average of 3.6 to 11.1 serotypes within 6 weeks post-immunization.
  • Most patients experienced positive clinical outcomes, with 81% showing no recurrent infections after the first booster and 94% after a second, indicating the booster is highly effective for children across various ages.
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