Does maternal BCG prime for enhanced beneficial effects of neonatal BCG in the offspring?

Journal of Infection(2021)

引用 4|浏览7
暂无评分
摘要
Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccination lowers the risk of severe infection; we tested whether effects are modulated by maternal BCG in a large cohort of BCG-vaccinated newborns from Guinea-Bissau.Maternal BCG scar status were inspected at enrolment in a BCG trial conducted from 2014-17 in Bissau, Guinea-Bissau. We tested associations with background factors for potential confounding; maternal age affected effect estimates >5% and accordingly, all analyses were adjusted for maternal age. Hospitalization data was collected prospectively and assessed in Cox-models providing adjusted Incidence Rate Ratios (aIRRs). In-hospital risk of death (case-fatality) risk was assessed using binomial regression providing adjusted Risk Ratios (aRRs).60% (6,309/10,598) of mothers had a scar. The maternal-scar/no-scar admission aIRR was 0.96 (0.81-1.14) from 0-6 weeks and 1.12 (0.97-1.28) for 6 weeks-3 years. The 6-week in-hospital case-fatality infection aRR was 0.59 (0.34-1.05); 0.40 (0.17-0.91) for males and 0.86 (0.38-1.94) for females. Protection was especially evident against sepsis, the overall 6-week aRR=0.49 (0.26-0.91); no effect was observed for non-infectious deaths or after 6 weeks of age. Effects were similar across BCG strains and multivariate models adjusted for socioeconomic status did not affect estimates.Among BCG-vaccinated newborns, there was a trend for fewer in-hospital deaths from infection associated with maternal BCG priming, especially for males. Providing BCG to adults without a vaccination scar might enhance their offspring's capacity to handle severe infections.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要