Background: Administration of the varicella vaccine induces both varicella-zoster virus (VZV)-specific humoral and cell-mediated immunity (CMI).
Objective: To assess VZV-CMI, we developed an interferon γ enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (IFN-γ ELISA) that measures the quantity of total IFN-γ in culture supernatants of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells.
Study design: We evaluated this method by comparing the pre- and post-vaccination immune response in peripheral blood mononuclear cells of 30 healthy children who were administered an initial varicella vaccination at Konan Kosei hospital.
Results: IFN-γ ELISA showed well-validated results; CMI was not detectable pre-immunization but became detectable post-immunization. Seroconversion was detected in 92.6% of subjects by the immune adherence hemagglutination test; however, half of the subjects did not display an increase in CMI levels. We also compared the incidence of breakthrough varicella and herpes zoster development between CMI post-positive and post-negative vaccinees at 1-2years after the last VZV vaccination. Eight subjects had a history of varicella or herpes zoster exposure post-VZV vaccination. Two of them with post-negative CMI contracted breakthrough varicella 15-16months after the last vaccination, even though they had sufficient VZV-specific antibody levels to be considered seropositive and seroprotected. Conversely, the others with post-positive CMI did not contract breakthrough varicella, despite experiencing extensive VZV exposure through casual contact with playmates and family.
Conclusions: The CMI data generated by this IFN-γ ELISA may accurately reflect real-world immune status, and CMI may be closely related to immunoprotection against breakthrough varicella development.
【저자키워드】 Cell-mediated immunity, Varicella vaccine, Breakthrough varicella, IFN-γ ELISA,