Low birthweight and prematurity, but not malaria chemoprevention, are associated with reduced pneumococcal vaccine immunogenicity in Ugandan infants
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Background
Malaria exposure has been hypothesized to alter immune responses to childhood vaccines, but evidence is inconsistent. We evaluated whether early-life malaria exposure and perennial malaria chemoprevention (PMC) modify antibody responses to the 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV-10) among infants in a high malaria transmission setting in eastern Uganda.
Methods
This study was nested within the MIC-DroP trial ( NCT04978272 ) whereby 202 infants were selected for inclusion. Serotype-specific IgG concentrations were measured using an in-house multiplex seroassay from samples obtained at 8 and 24 weeks of age. Immunogenicity was quantified as the log 10 fold-change in IgG concentration between the 8 and 24-week timepoints, and seroconversion as ≥0.35 μg/mL at week 24 (i.e., seropositive). Generalized estimating equation models were used to assess associations of PCV-10 immunogenicity and seroconversion with malaria exposure, malaria chemoprevention and birth outcomes.
Results
Among the 195 of 202 infants who completed the three-dose PCV-10 series, neither infant PMC nor malaria exposure from study enrollment to 14 weeks were associated with PCV-10 immunogenicity or seroconversion. In contrast, low birthweight (<2500g) was associated with lower immunogenicity (82% lower antibody fold-change, p=0.003) and reduced odds of seroconversion (OR=0.19, p=0.003); preterm birth (<37 weeks) showed similar associations (79% lower antibody fold-change, p=0.018; OR=0.181, p=0.009).
Conclusion
In this malaria-endemic setting, early-life malaria exposure and chemoprevention did not measurably alter PCV-10 antibody responses. However, low birthweight and prematurity were associated with reduced vaccine immunogenicity.