Developing Correlates of Protection for Vaccines Is Needed More than Ever-Influenza, COVID-19 and RSV Infection

被引:0
作者
Vajo, Zoltan [1 ]
Laszlofy, Csaba [2 ]
机构
[1] Semmelwe Univ, Dept Family Med, Med Sch, H-1085 Budapest, Hungary
[2] Univ Szeged, Fac Dent, Dept Prosthodont, H-6720 Szeged, Hungary
来源
VIRUSES-BASEL | 2024年 / 16卷 / 11期
关键词
Influenza; COVID-19; RSV; antibody; immunity; VIRUS; IMMUNITY; FLUVAL; ADULTS;
D O I
10.3390/v16111671
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
One of the greatest success stories of modern medicine is the prevention of infectious diseases by vaccination, most notably against smallpox and poliomyelitis. However, recent events, such as the 2009-2010 swine flu and the 2020 COVID-19 pandemics, as well as the continued emergence of highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses highlighted the fact that we still need to develop new vaccines, and perhaps we should be proactive, rather than reacting to epidemics and pandemics. However, the development of tools for evaluating novel vaccines has not been able to keep up with the rate of vaccine production. Humoral and cellular immune responses to vaccination have both been suggested to be important in preventing infections or ameliorating their consequences, although there is uncertainty regarding their exact roles and importance. This, together with the rapid development of new vaccines, means that the need for developing immunogenicity parameters, and even more importantly, reliable correlates of protection, is more important than ever.
引用
收藏
页数:7
相关论文
共 40 条
[21]   Chemerin Levels in COVID-19 Are More Affected by Underlying Diseases than by the Virus Infection Itself [J].
Pavel, Vlad ;
Amend, Pablo ;
Schmidtner, Niklas ;
Utrata, Alexander ;
Birner, Charlotte ;
Schmid, Stephan ;
Krautbauer, Sabrina ;
Mueller, Martina ;
Mester, Patricia ;
Buechler, Christa .
BIOMEDICINES, 2024, 12 (09)
[22]   Potential impact of combined influenza and pneumococcal vaccines on the severity of respiratory illness in COVID-19 infection among type 2 diabetic patients [J].
Hanafy, Amr Shaaban ;
Seleem, Waseem M. ;
Elkattawy, Hany A. .
CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE, 2023, 23 (01) :141-150
[23]   Potential impact of combined influenza and pneumococcal vaccines on the severity of respiratory illness in COVID-19 infection among type 2 diabetic patients [J].
Amr Shaaban Hanafy ;
Waseem M. Seleem ;
Hany A. Elkattawy .
Clinical and Experimental Medicine, 2023, 23 :141-150
[24]   Developing new COVID-19 vaccine against the variants is urgently needed rather than boosters: A longitudinal cohort study [J].
Xu, Qiu-Yan ;
Zheng, Xin-Qi ;
Jia, Zhi-Juan ;
Wu, Meng-Juan ;
Liu, Yan-Yun ;
Liu, Li-Li ;
Lin, Li-Rong ;
Yang, Tian-Ci .
JOURNAL OF INFECTION, 2023, 86 (02) :E55-E57
[25]   Estimating the impact of COVID-19 on South Asia's exports: does trade facilitation matter now more than ever? [J].
Kumari, Mamta ;
Bharti, Nalin .
TRANSNATIONAL CORPORATIONS REVIEW, 2021, 13 (04) :406-421
[26]   The Role of Immunity in the Pathogenesis of SARS-CoV-2 Infection and in the Protection Generated by COVID-19 Vaccines in Different Age Groups [J].
Abdulla, Zainalabideen A. A. ;
Al-Bashir, Sharaf M. M. ;
Alzoubi, Hiba ;
Al-Salih, Noor S. S. ;
Aldamen, Ala A. A. ;
Abdulazeez, Ahmed Z. Z. .
PATHOGENS, 2023, 12 (02)
[27]   Is a municipal socio-economic ranking more influential than vaccination on daily growth in COVID-19 infection rate? [J].
Arbel, Yuval ;
Arbel, Yifat ;
Kerner, Amichai ;
Kerner, Miryam .
COGENT SOCIAL SCIENCES, 2024, 10 (01)
[28]   Developing variant-adapted COVID-19 vaccines to improve protection against Omicron and other recent variants: a plain language summary [J].
Pather, Shanti ;
Muik, Alexander ;
Rizzi, Ruben ;
Mensa, Federico .
EXPERT REVIEW OF VACCINES, 2024, 23 (01) :463-466
[29]   Intranasal influenza-vectored COVID-19 vaccines confer broad protection against SARS-CoV-2 XBB variants in hamsters [J].
Chen, Junyu ;
Chen, Congjie ;
Yuan, Lunzhi ;
Chen, Yaode ;
Wang, Xijing ;
Tang, Ningxin ;
Wei, Dongmei ;
Ye, Xiangzhong ;
Xia, Ningshao ;
Chen, Yixin .
PNAS NEXUS, 2024, 3 (05)
[30]   Number of initial symptoms is more related to long COVID-19 than acute severity of infection: a prospective cohort of hospitalized patients [J].
Ko, Adrien Chan Sui ;
Candellier, Alexandre ;
Mercier, Marie ;
Joseph, Cedric ;
Schmit, Jean-Luc ;
Lanoix, Jean-Philippe ;
Andrejak, Claire .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2022, 118 :220-223