Maternal HIV infection and antibody responses in uninfected infants: In reply
Maternal HIV infection and antibody responses in uninfected infants: In reply
Ms de Souza and colleagues are concerned about factors that may have biased our results. While it has been documented that breastfeeding may affect responses to vaccination, it is unlikely to account for the differences we observed between HIV-exposed and unexposed infants. The majority of published data suggests that breastfeeding enhances rather than reduces vaccine responses,1 specifically to diphtheria, tetanus, polio, BCG, and Haemophilus influenzae type b.2,3 Moon et al4 showed that higher levels of maternal IgA in breast milk can cause neutralization of live oral rotavirus antigens in vitro. We did not measure responses to rotavirus or any oral vaccine. We acknowledge that while breastfeeding may enhance the antibody response to some vaccines and potentially decrease the response to live oral vaccines, it would not explain our findings, namely increased responses among uninfected HIV-exposed infants to some vaccines, since all of these infants were exclusively formula fed. Therefore, we may in fact have underestimated the effect of HIV exposure on vaccine responses
1964-1965
Jones, Christine E.
48229079-8b58-4dcb-8374-d9481fe7b426
Kampmann, Beate
4490f5e3-318c-4074-bf69-4a23bd5ec100
Hesseling, Anneke
f97382e1-ac66-4c60-aa47-153f2ea687df
18 May 2011
Jones, Christine E.
48229079-8b58-4dcb-8374-d9481fe7b426
Kampmann, Beate
4490f5e3-318c-4074-bf69-4a23bd5ec100
Hesseling, Anneke
f97382e1-ac66-4c60-aa47-153f2ea687df
Jones, Christine E., Kampmann, Beate and Hesseling, Anneke
(2011)
Maternal HIV infection and antibody responses in uninfected infants: In reply.
JAMA, 305 (19), .
(doi:10.1001/jama.2011.639).
Abstract
Ms de Souza and colleagues are concerned about factors that may have biased our results. While it has been documented that breastfeeding may affect responses to vaccination, it is unlikely to account for the differences we observed between HIV-exposed and unexposed infants. The majority of published data suggests that breastfeeding enhances rather than reduces vaccine responses,1 specifically to diphtheria, tetanus, polio, BCG, and Haemophilus influenzae type b.2,3 Moon et al4 showed that higher levels of maternal IgA in breast milk can cause neutralization of live oral rotavirus antigens in vitro. We did not measure responses to rotavirus or any oral vaccine. We acknowledge that while breastfeeding may enhance the antibody response to some vaccines and potentially decrease the response to live oral vaccines, it would not explain our findings, namely increased responses among uninfected HIV-exposed infants to some vaccines, since all of these infants were exclusively formula fed. Therefore, we may in fact have underestimated the effect of HIV exposure on vaccine responses
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Published date: 18 May 2011
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Local EPrints ID: 474854
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/474854
ISSN: 0098-7484
PURE UUID: b8a0e743-8308-4229-9888-3c0a53ef29f1
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Date deposited: 03 Mar 2023 17:49
Last modified: 06 Jun 2024 01:58
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Author:
Beate Kampmann
Author:
Anneke Hesseling
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