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Review

Pediatric influenza vaccination: understanding the T-cell response

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Pages 963-971 | Published online: 09 Jan 2014
 

Abstract

Influenza A virus-specific T cells are highly cross-reactive and contribute to heterosubtypic immunity, which may afford protection against novel pandemic strains of influenza virus. However, the magnitude and nature of virus-specific T-cell responses induced by natural infections and/or vaccination in young children is poorly understood. Host factors, such as the development of the immune system during childhood and environmental factors such as exposure rates to influenza viruses and interference by vaccination contribute to shaping the magnitude and specificity of the T-cell response. Here, the authors review several of these factors, including the differences between T-cell responses of young children and adults, the age-dependent frequency of virus-specific T cells and the impact of annual childhood influenza vaccination. In addition, the authors summarize all currently available studies in which influenza vaccine-induced T-cell responses were evaluated. The authors discuss these findings in the light of developing vaccines and vaccination strategies aiming at the induction of protective immunity to seasonal and pandemic influenza viruses of antigenically distinct subtypes.

Financial & competing interests disclosure

R Bodewes and GF Rimmelzwaan received financial support from EU grant FluPig (FP7-GA258084). PLA Fraaij was financially supported by the VIRGO grant of the National Genomics Institute. The authors have no other relevant affiliations or financial involvement with any organization or entity with a financial interest in or financial conflict with the subject matter or materials discussed in the manuscript apart from those disclosed.

No writing assistance was utilized in the production of this manuscript.

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