ABO blood types, but not Secretor or Lewis blood types, influence strength of antibody response to Hepatitis B vaccine in Black South African children

We examined 16 polymorphisms in the ABO, FUT2, and FUT3 genes and their related phenotypes for associations with strength of antibody response to HBV vaccine in Black South African infants. Anti-HBc and anti-HBs antibody levels were measured by CMIA assay 1-3 months after the last dose of HBV vaccine. Prior infection occurred in 8/207 individuals (3.86%) who were removed from further study. Of the remaining 199 individuals, 83.4% individuals were strong responders (anti-HBs ≥ 100 mIU/ml, median 973 mIU/ml), another 15.6% were weak responders (anti-HBs < 100 mIU/ml, median 50 mIU/ml) and 1% were non-responders (anti-HBs < 10 mIU/ml). The frequency of weak responders to HBV vaccine was not significantly affected by sex, birthweight, use of an additional booster dose of vaccine or cohort of origin. We characterised patterns of genetic variation present at the ABO, FUT2 and FUT3 loci by use of MassArray genotyping and used these data to predict ABO, Secretor and Lewis phenotypes. We observed significant association of ABO blood type with strength of antibody response to HBV vaccine in a Black South African cohort (p = 0.002). In particular, presence of rs8176747G and expression of B antigen (whether in B blood type or AB blood type) was associated with decreased antibody response to HBV vaccine. Secretor and Lewis blood types were not associated with antibody response to HBV vaccine. This work increases our understanding of the impact that host genetic variation may have ...
Source: Vaccine - Category: Allergy & Immunology Authors: Source Type: research