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Clinical Trial
. 2002 Jun;103(3 Pt 1):249-59.
doi: 10.1006/clim.2002.5220.

Impaired primary immune response in type-1 diabetes: results from a controlled vaccination study

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Impaired primary immune response in type-1 diabetes: results from a controlled vaccination study

Nicole Eibl et al. Clin Immunol. 2002 Jun.

Abstract

Patients with diabetes have an increased risk for infections, but information on their adoptive immunity is incomplete and contradictory. Twenty patients with diabetes type-1 and 20 patients with type-2 diabetes were vaccinated with T-cell-dependent primary protein antigens (hepatitis A viral antigen, HAV; diphtheria toxoid) and a T-cell-independent polysaccharide antigen (pneumococcal polysaccharide). In parallel, the proliferative response of CD4+ T-cells to the primary protein antigens keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH) and sperm whale myoglobin (SWM) was measured in vitro using monocyte-derived dendritic cells (MDDC) as antigen-presenting cells. Compared to healthy controls, type-1 diabetes patients mounted a significantly impaired primary antibody response to hepatitis A vaccine (median HAV antibody titer after the first vaccination, 53 IU/L in diabetic patients vs 212 IU/L in the controls, P = 0.017) and diphtheria toxoid (median serum antibodies after vaccination, patients, 0.94 IU/ml, controls, 6.38 IU/ml, P = 0.004), while the response to pneumococcal polysaccharide was normal. Type-2 diabetes patients had a comparable metabolic dysregulation but showed a normal antibody response following vaccination, demonstrating that the effect was not due to hyperglycemia. Antigen-induced interferon-gamma and interleukin-13 release was reduced in type-1 diabetes patients, localizing the impairment to the level of antigen-presenting cell-T-cell interaction. In addition, the proliferative response of CD4+ T-cells derived from type-1 diabetes patients to KLH and SWM was significantly reduced (P < or = 0.01). FACS analysis of CD80 (B7.1), CD86 (B7.2), and HLA-DR expression on MDDC could not demonstrate significant differences in the expression of these molecules between type-1 and type-2 diabetes patients and healthy controls. An association of low HAV antibody response with HLA-DR3,4 expression in the patients was shown. Our results indicate that the primary antibody response to T-cell dependent antigens as well as the T-cell response to primary protein antigens is reduced in type-1 diabetes patients and that additional booster immunization can overcome the defect.

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