The scientific basis of vaccines Flashcards
What was variolation?
- If someone had smallpox you would scrape the lesions after they had healed, and then inoculated it on someone else’s arm - theory is that it would protect them
- Didnt work every time, lots of people died because of it
What were the 4 scientific principles from Jenner’s experiments?
- Challenge dose - proves protection from infection
- Concept of attenuation
- Concept that prior exposure to antigen boosts protective response
- Cross-species protection - antigenic similarity
How did we manage to eradicate smallpox?
- Had good vaccination programmes that worked, with good case finding surveillance and restriction of movement of sufferers
- With smallpox there are no subclinical infections (either get it or dont)
- Also no latency of the virus
- There is no animal reservoir, so once you got rid of it in humans, you were good
- Had an effective vaccine
- Has slow spread and poor transmission
Define vaccine
- Material from an organism that will actively enhance adaptive immunity
- Produces an immunologically ‘primed’ state that allows for a rapid second immune response on exposure to antigen
- Antibodies and/or T cells
What vaccine ‘scares’ have we had?
MMR and autsm
Whooping cough
What is the vaccine paradox?
- Herd immunity
- Our immune memory is boosted by periodic outbreaks of disease in community and vaccines
- As disease rates decline due to vaccination, no-one gets the disease and so there is no natural immune boosting against the disease
- This increases the importance of vaccination uptake
What are the different types of immunity?
- Active immunity = innate/adaptive. Natural exposure, infection and vaccination - gives long effect
- Passive immunity = antibody from another source such as serum. Used for prophylaxis and/or treatment - short effect
What are the general principles of vaccines?
- Induce the correct type of response (antibodies -> polio, cell-mediated -> TB)
- Induce the response in the right place (mucosal- sIgA -> flu, polio; systemic -> yellow fever)
- Duration of protection - short term -> travel; long-term -> memory essential; booster -> natural or vaccines
What is haemophilus influenza?
- Paediatric disease - usually 6 months-3yrs
- Initially a nasopharyngitis that spreads to an otitis media, sinusitis, bronchitis, pneumonia or sometime epiglottis
- Spreads and causes bacteraemia, septic arthritis, meningitis in 60% of cases
- Most haemophilus infections occur in the first few months, howeber we dont start to make Abs until about 2, so need to give vaccine early
What is the problem with giving live vaccines to infants?
- Maternal in neonate and sIgA in milk
- If you give a live attenuated vaccine, the virus would be neutralised by maternal Ab - giving no protection
What are the different routes of inoculation?
- Oral - e.g. polio
- Intradermal - BCG
- Deep s/c or i/m - most
What are the advantages of oral administration of vaccines?
- Avoids needles and so risk of HIV/HepB
- mimicry of natural route of infection
- ensures exposure to large immune surface
- Good sIgA response
- Humoral immunity via lymphocyte trafficking to other mucosal surfaces
What is the main problem with oral vaccines?
was it swallowed?!
Monotypic vs polytypic ags
- Measles virus doesnt change very much - doesnt mutate rapidly or express a range of Ags on the surface - tend to only get it once = MONOTYPIC
- However other pathogens are changing all the time, such as flu and gonorrhoea = POLYTYPIC
What are the different types of vaccines?
- Live, attenuated
- Killed, whole organism
- Sub-unit vaccines