Natural T cell–mediated protection against seasonal and pandemic influenza. Results of the flu watch cohort study

AC Hayward, L Wang, N Goonetilleke… - American journal of …, 2015 - atsjournals.org
AC Hayward, L Wang, N Goonetilleke, EB Fragaszy, A Bermingham, A Copas, O Dukes
American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine, 2015atsjournals.org
Rationale: A high proportion of influenza infections are asymptomatic. Animal and human
challenge studies and observational studies suggest T cells protect against disease among
those infected, but the impact of T-cell immunity at the population level is unknown.
Objectives: To investigate whether naturally preexisting T-cell responses targeting highly
conserved internal influenza proteins could provide cross-protective immunity against
pandemic and seasonal influenza. Methods: We quantified influenza A (H3N2) virus …
Rationale: A high proportion of influenza infections are asymptomatic. Animal and human challenge studies and observational studies suggest T cells protect against disease among those infected, but the impact of T-cell immunity at the population level is unknown.
Objectives: To investigate whether naturally preexisting T-cell responses targeting highly conserved internal influenza proteins could provide cross-protective immunity against pandemic and seasonal influenza.
Methods: We quantified influenza A(H3N2) virus–specific T cells in a population cohort during seasonal and pandemic periods between 2006 and 2010. Follow-up included paired serology, symptom reporting, and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) investigation of symptomatic cases.
Measurements and Main Results: A total of 1,414 unvaccinated individuals had baseline T-cell measurements (1,703 participant observation sets). T-cell responses to A(H3N2) virus nucleoprotein (NP) dominated and strongly cross-reacted with A(H1N1)pdm09 NP (P < 0.001) in participants lacking antibody to A(H1N1)pdm09. Comparison of paired preseason and post-season sera (1,431 sets) showed 205 (14%) had evidence of infection based on fourfold influenza antibody titer rises. The presence of NP-specific T cells before exposure to virus correlated with less symptomatic, PCR-positive influenza A (overall adjusted odds ratio, 0.27; 95% confidence interval, 0.11–0.68; P = 0.005, during pandemic [P = 0.047] and seasonal [P = 0.049] periods). Protection was independent of baseline antibodies. Influenza-specific T-cell responses were detected in 43%, indicating a substantial population impact.
Conclusions: Naturally occurring cross-protective T-cell immunity protects against symptomatic PCR-confirmed disease in those with evidence of infection and helps to explain why many infections do not cause symptoms. Vaccines stimulating T cells may provide important cross-protective immunity.
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