Half-life Estimation of Pertussis-Specific Maternal Antibodies in (Pre)Term Infants After In-Pregnancy Tetanus, Diphtheria, Acellular Pertussis Vaccination

Author:

Embacher Stefan1,Maertens Kirsten2,Herzog Sereina A1

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Medical Informatics, Statistics, and Documentation, Medical University of Graz , Graz , Austria

2. Centre for the Evaluation of Vaccination, Vaccine and Infectious Diseases Institute, University of Antwerp , Antwerp , Belgium

Abstract

Abstract Background To reduce the risk of pertussis-related morbidity and mortality in early life, an increasing number of countries recommend maternal pertussis vaccination. However, there is limited knowledge about half-lives of vaccine-induced pertussis-specific maternal antibodies, especially in preterm infants, and factors potentially influencing them. Methods We compared 2 different approaches to provide estimates of the half-lives of pertussis-specific maternal antibodies in infants and explored potential effects on the half-life in 2 studies. In the first approach, we estimated the half-lives per child and used these estimates as responses in linear models. In the second approach, we used linear mixed effect models on a log2 transformed scale of the longitudinal data to use the inverse of the time parameter as an estimate for the half-lives. Results Both approaches provided similar results. The identified covariates partly explain differences in half-life estimates. The strongest evidence we observed was a difference between term and preterm infants, with the preterm infants showing a longer half-life. Among others, a longer interval between vaccination and delivery increases the half-life. Conclusions Several variables influence the decay speed of maternal antibodies. Both approaches have advantages and disadvantages, while the choice is secondary when assessing the half-life of pertussis-specific antibodies. Clinical Trials Registration NCT02408926 and NCT02511327.

Funder

Austrian Science Fund

the Research Foundation—Flanders

Thrasher Research Fund

FWO

Sanofi Pasteur

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Immunology and Allergy

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