Vaccines Flashcards

1
Q

Which disease is completely irradicated by vaccine?

A

Smallpox (in 1979)

99.9% of measles

Almost all of Hib and epiglottitis

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2
Q

Why do we immunise people?

A

To prevent infection
To treat infection (especially rabies or diphtheria if given vaccine within 24 hours)
To prevent/treat non-infectious diseases like cancer (HPV, HepB)
To modify immune responses (can desensitise people to Allergy by introducing small doses OR give Ab to make disease less severe e.g. in measles)

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3
Q

What is passive immunisation?

A

Where human, horse or Mab’s are used to treat or prevent disease. There are two types: (1) pooled: where Ab is derived from plasma or (2) hyperimmune: where those with plasma of high dose Ab or infect animals and derive high doses of Ab

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4
Q

T/F: Passive immunisation is long lived

A

FALSE. It is short lived and potentially hazardous because can deliver active T cells

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5
Q

What is active immunisation?

A

Where the body makes its own immune response to the infectious agent. This may be to a living organism or to parts of the capsule/virion etc.

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6
Q

List some mechanisms of use for active immunisation using living organisms

A

These can be living unattenuated, that is from a different host or route E.g.;

1) use of cowpox to treat small pox
2) Adenovirus to treat respiratory infections when given by mouth it wont have diarrhoeal side effect

Emperically attenuated: Become less virulent (BCG vaccine for m.TB), Typhoid, Polio (Oral phase vaccine), MMR, VZV, yellow fever

Rationally attenuated: Deletion of toxin genes (cholera)

Reassortment: Clone genes for adhesins and add to an existing vaccine (Rotateq - Rotavirus dsRNA and Influenza ssRNA virus segmented genome against Ha and NA)

Antigen expressed on living vector

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7
Q

List some mechanisms of use for active immunisation using particles of organisms

A

1) Inactivated vaccine: Polio (Salk: injected/killed vaccine), Influenza, HepA, Japanese encephalitis, rabies, Cholera, Typhoid, Pertussus
2) Purified product (+/- modification): HepB surface antigen, HPV uses virus like particles, acellular pertussis (that includes the toxin, filamentous HA and pertactin), TOXOIDS (those that have A-B toxin e.g. cholera, diptheria, tetanus), Cellular polysaccharides (unmodified; Salmonella typhi, pneumococcal polyvalent vaccine OR conjugated; Hib and meningococcal)
3) Product of cloned gene
4) synthetic Ig; peptide vaccine
5) DNA vaccine (experimental only)

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8
Q

What are some advantages for living vaccines?

A

More natural better immune response
Local immunity
Ease of administration

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9
Q

What are some disadvantages for living vaccines?

A

Can sometimes revert back to virulent form (e.g. WT Polio)
Cannot use in immunocompromised (get sick) or pregnant women (affect foetus)
May be contaminated: cannot sterilise so other organisms may grow in vaccine
Need to be transported by “cold-chain” to keep the organism alive
May fail due to preexisting immunity or IFN interference

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10
Q

What are some advantages of killed vaccines?

A

They are stable
Unlikely to be contaminated
Cannot spread
Safe for immunocompromised

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11
Q

What are some disadvantages for killed vaccines?

A

There is a weaker immune response
High dises required
Need adjuvant
They are expensive

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