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Vaccine-induced antibody responses as parameters of the influence of endogenous and environmental factors.

In laboratory animals, an adequate way to assess effects of environmental exposures on the immune system is to study effects on antigen-specific immune responses, such as after sensitization to T-cell-dependent antigens. This probably also applies to testing effects in the human population. It has t...

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Autores principales: Van Loveren, H, Van Amsterdam, J G, Vandebriel, R J, Kimman, T G, Rümke, H C, Steerenberg, P S, Vos, J G
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2001
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1240401/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11564609
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author Van Loveren, H
Van Amsterdam, J G
Vandebriel, R J
Kimman, T G
Rümke, H C
Steerenberg, P S
Vos, J G
author_facet Van Loveren, H
Van Amsterdam, J G
Vandebriel, R J
Kimman, T G
Rümke, H C
Steerenberg, P S
Vos, J G
author_sort Van Loveren, H
collection PubMed
description In laboratory animals, an adequate way to assess effects of environmental exposures on the immune system is to study effects on antigen-specific immune responses, such as after sensitization to T-cell-dependent antigens. This probably also applies to testing effects in the human population. It has thus been suggested that antibody responses to vaccination might be useful in this context. Vaccination responses may be influenced by a variety of factors other than environmental ones. One factor is the vaccine itself; a second is the vaccination procedure used. In addition, the intrinsic capacity of the recipient to respond to a vaccine, which is determined by sex, genetic factors, and age, is important. Psychological stress, nutrition, and (infectious) diseases are also likely to have an impact. We reviewed the literature on vaccine response. With regard to exogenous factors, there is good evidence that smoking, diet, psychological stress, and certain infectious diseases affect vaccination titers, although it is difficult to determine to what extent. Genetic factors render certain individuals nonresponsive to vaccination. In general, in epidemiologic studies of adverse effects of exposure to agents in the environment in which vaccination titers are used, these additional factors need to be taken into consideration. Provided that these factors are corrected for, a study that shows an association of exposure to a given agent with diminished vaccination responses may indicate suboptimal function of the immune system and clinically relevant diminished immune response. It is quite unlikely that environmental exposures that affect responses to vaccination may in fact abrogate protection to the specific pathogen for which vaccination was performed. Only in those cases where individuals have a poor response to the vaccine may exogenous factors perhaps have a clinically significant influence on resistance to the specific pathogen. An exposure-associated inhibition of a vaccination response may, however, signify a decreased host resistance to pathogens against which no vaccination had been performed.
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spelling pubmed-12404012005-11-08 Vaccine-induced antibody responses as parameters of the influence of endogenous and environmental factors. Van Loveren, H Van Amsterdam, J G Vandebriel, R J Kimman, T G Rümke, H C Steerenberg, P S Vos, J G Environ Health Perspect Research Article In laboratory animals, an adequate way to assess effects of environmental exposures on the immune system is to study effects on antigen-specific immune responses, such as after sensitization to T-cell-dependent antigens. This probably also applies to testing effects in the human population. It has thus been suggested that antibody responses to vaccination might be useful in this context. Vaccination responses may be influenced by a variety of factors other than environmental ones. One factor is the vaccine itself; a second is the vaccination procedure used. In addition, the intrinsic capacity of the recipient to respond to a vaccine, which is determined by sex, genetic factors, and age, is important. Psychological stress, nutrition, and (infectious) diseases are also likely to have an impact. We reviewed the literature on vaccine response. With regard to exogenous factors, there is good evidence that smoking, diet, psychological stress, and certain infectious diseases affect vaccination titers, although it is difficult to determine to what extent. Genetic factors render certain individuals nonresponsive to vaccination. In general, in epidemiologic studies of adverse effects of exposure to agents in the environment in which vaccination titers are used, these additional factors need to be taken into consideration. Provided that these factors are corrected for, a study that shows an association of exposure to a given agent with diminished vaccination responses may indicate suboptimal function of the immune system and clinically relevant diminished immune response. It is quite unlikely that environmental exposures that affect responses to vaccination may in fact abrogate protection to the specific pathogen for which vaccination was performed. Only in those cases where individuals have a poor response to the vaccine may exogenous factors perhaps have a clinically significant influence on resistance to the specific pathogen. An exposure-associated inhibition of a vaccination response may, however, signify a decreased host resistance to pathogens against which no vaccination had been performed. 2001-08 /pmc/articles/PMC1240401/ /pubmed/11564609 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Van Loveren, H
Van Amsterdam, J G
Vandebriel, R J
Kimman, T G
Rümke, H C
Steerenberg, P S
Vos, J G
Vaccine-induced antibody responses as parameters of the influence of endogenous and environmental factors.
title Vaccine-induced antibody responses as parameters of the influence of endogenous and environmental factors.
title_full Vaccine-induced antibody responses as parameters of the influence of endogenous and environmental factors.
title_fullStr Vaccine-induced antibody responses as parameters of the influence of endogenous and environmental factors.
title_full_unstemmed Vaccine-induced antibody responses as parameters of the influence of endogenous and environmental factors.
title_short Vaccine-induced antibody responses as parameters of the influence of endogenous and environmental factors.
title_sort vaccine-induced antibody responses as parameters of the influence of endogenous and environmental factors.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1240401/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11564609
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