Vaccination responses and lymphocyte subsets after autologous stem cell transplantation
2007
Abstract Twenty autologous stem cell transplant recipients were vaccinated with three doses of Diphtheria–Tetanus–Poliomyelitis vaccine and conjugated Haemophilus influenzae type b ( Hib ) vaccine. Pneumococcal vaccination consisted of two doses of conjugated vaccine followed by a single dose of polysaccharide vaccine, at 6, 8 and 14 months after transplantation, respectively. Mean anti-tetanus, anti- Hib and anti-pneumococcal IgG antibodies significantly increased after each vaccination. Response rates after the full vaccination schedule were 94%, 78% and 61% for Hib , conjugated 7-valent pneumococcal vaccine and non-conjugated 23-valent pneumococcal vaccine, respectively. Three months after transplantation, CD16 + CD56 + NK cells were in the normal range and remained so. The total number of T lymphocytes at 3 months was and remained in the normal range. The mean CD4/CD8 ratio was 0.43 at 3 months post aSCT and, while gradually increasing, remained subnormal. The mean number of CD19 + B lymphocytes significantly increased during the study period. Patients with CD19 counts 9 L −1 required at least two Hib vaccinations to show a response, while the majority of patients with CD19 counts ≥0.20 × 10 9 L −1 showed a response to Hib after one vaccination only. Thus, a minimum threshold level of CD19 + cells appears to be required for adequate responses to vaccination.
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