TY - JOUR
T1 - Use of a live attenuated varicella vaccine to boost varicella-specific immune responses in seropositive people 55 years of age and older
T2 - Duration of booster effect
AU - Levin, Myron J.
AU - Barber, Deb
AU - Goldblatt, Eileen
AU - Jones, Michelle
AU - LaFleur, Bonnie
AU - Chan, Christina
AU - Stinson, Diane
AU - Zerbe, Gary O.
AU - Hayward, Anthony R.
PY - 1998
Y1 - 1998
N2 - Varicella-zoster virus (VZV)-specific T cell immunity was measured in 130 persons ≥55 years of age 6 years after they received a live attenuated VZV vaccine. Circulating T cells, which proliferated in vitro in response to VZV antigen, were enumerated (VZV responder cell frequency assay). Six years after the booster vaccination, the VZV-responding cell frequency (1/61,000 circulating cells) was still significantly (P < .05) improved over the baseline measurements (1/70,000) and appears to have diminished the expected decline in frequency as these vaccinees aged (to 1/86,000). Ten herpes- zoster-like clinical events were recorded. Although the frequency of these events, 1/100 patient-years, is within the expected range of such events for this age cohort, the number of lesions was small, there was very little pain, and there was no postherpetic neuralgia. These results support the development of a vaccine to prevent or attenuate herpes zoster.
AB - Varicella-zoster virus (VZV)-specific T cell immunity was measured in 130 persons ≥55 years of age 6 years after they received a live attenuated VZV vaccine. Circulating T cells, which proliferated in vitro in response to VZV antigen, were enumerated (VZV responder cell frequency assay). Six years after the booster vaccination, the VZV-responding cell frequency (1/61,000 circulating cells) was still significantly (P < .05) improved over the baseline measurements (1/70,000) and appears to have diminished the expected decline in frequency as these vaccinees aged (to 1/86,000). Ten herpes- zoster-like clinical events were recorded. Although the frequency of these events, 1/100 patient-years, is within the expected range of such events for this age cohort, the number of lesions was small, there was very little pain, and there was no postherpetic neuralgia. These results support the development of a vaccine to prevent or attenuate herpes zoster.
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U2 - 10.1086/514264
DO - 10.1086/514264
M3 - Article
C2 - 9852987
AN - SCOPUS:0031766167
SN - 0022-1899
VL - 178
SP - S109-S112
JO - Journal of Infectious Diseases
JF - Journal of Infectious Diseases
IS - 5 SUPPL.
ER -