Vaccination Flashcards

1
Q

What is the main aim of immunisation?

A

To provoke immunological memory to protect individuals against a particular disease if they later encounter it.

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2
Q

What are the 7 key points of an ‘ideal vaccine’?

A
  1. Completely safe
  2. Easy to administer
  3. Single dose, needle-free
  4. Cheap
  5. Stable
  6. Active against all variants
  7. Life-long protection
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3
Q

What are the 3 ways vaccinations stop infections upon second exposure?

A
  1. Prevention of entry - antibodies specific to the pathogen bind and block entry
  2. Killing infected cells - antibodies opsonise the pathogens
  3. Boosting immune response - Engages CD4 helper cells which enable both B cells and NK cells.
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4
Q

What are correlates of protection?

A

Measurable signs that a person is immune from a disease. Usually an ELISA assay is used to quantify antibody levels in blood and check whether it is above the threshold value for immunity.

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5
Q

What do correlates of protection enable?

A
  1. Allows for smarter vaccine design

2. Allows for smaller efficacy studies

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6
Q

How does BCR selection occur?

A

B cell antigen specificity is determined by the surface bound BCR antibody. It has a light and heavy chain encoded by individual genes made by recombination of building blocks.

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7
Q

What is affinity maturation?

A

Tfh cells present a very small amount of antigens in the lymph node. B cells undergo small point mutations in the BCR gene to improve specificity. B cells that can bind to the antigen are selected for.

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8
Q

Why do people have multiple rounds of vaccination?

A

Improves specificity of BCR due to repeated exposure to antigen.

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9
Q

What is r0?

A

This is the basic reproduction number and refers to the number of cases on case generates over the course of the infectious period. For example if the r0 value is 3 then 1 infected person will infect 3 others on average.

Any r0 above 1 will spread through the population. A good vaccine will bring the r0 value below 1.

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10
Q

What is herd immunity?

A

Reduces the amount of infectious spread without having to immunise every individual in a population. This is because if a significant proportion of the population is immune then there is a lower chance for a transmitting case to meet a susceptible individual compared to an immune individual. This immune individual will also not pass on the infection to a susceptible individual therefore the susceptible individual is protected.

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11
Q

What are the 5 forms of antigens present in a vaccine?

What else is present in a vaccine?

A
  1. Inactivated protein e.g. tetanus toxoid
  2. Recombinant protein e.g. Hep B
  3. Live attenuated pathogen e.g. polio/BCG
  4. Dead pathogen e.g. split flu vaccine
  5. Carbohydrate e.g. s.pneumoniae.

Other:
Water, buffer, adjuvant

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12
Q

What are inactivated toxoid vaccines?

A

A chemically inactivated form of toxin is present in the vaccine that induces an antibody response e.g. tetanus toxoid.

Adv - Cheap, well characterised, safe, in use for many decades

Disadv - Requires good understanding of biology of infection and not all organisms encode toxin. There is also risk that the toxin is not properly inactivated.

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13
Q

What are recombinant protein vaccines?

A

Recombinant protein from pathogen induces classic neutralising antibodies e.g. Hep B surface antigen.

Adv - Pure, safe, low strain variation

Disadv - Relatively expensive and doesn’t work on all pathogens. For example the bacteria might have a carbohydrate capsule which is not very good at inducing a B cell response.

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14
Q

What are conjugate vaccines?

A

A polysaccharide coat component is coupled to an immunogenic carrier protein. The B cell binds to the polysaccharide part whilst antigen presenting cells such as dendritic cells bind to the protein part. However the B cell also presents the protein part on its MHC 2 molecules This means it can be activated by a T helper cell activated by the protein presented by the dendritic cell but produce antibodies specific to the polysaccharide. This improves the quality of the immune response.

Adv - Improves immunogenicity and is highly effective at controlling bacterial infection

Disadv - Expensive, carrier protein can interfere, very strain specific

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15
Q

What are dead pathogen vaccines?

A

The pathogen is chemically killed then inserted into the vaccine. This triggers antibody and T cell responses.

Adv - Leaves antigenic components intact and in context of other antigens. This makes it more immunogenic.

Disadv - Killing can slightly alter chemical structure of antigen. Requires capacity to grow the pathogen and there is a risk of contamination with live pathogen in the vaccine.

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16
Q

What are live attenuated vaccines?

A

Live pathogens present in the vaccine that have lost some of its pathogenicity. The pathogens are selected in such a way that they are able to replicate but do not cause sickness.

Adv - induces a stronger immune response and is localised where immune response would occur for real upon second exposure.

Disadv - can revert to virulence. Can also infect immunocompromised patients.

17
Q

What are adjuvants?

A

Adjuvants engage with pattern recognition receptors and induce danger signals that activate dendritic cells. They are also the trigger to license the response. This leads to a more robust immune response than using just the antigen alone.

18
Q

What vaccines are given at 8 weeks?

A

8 weeks:

  1. 6 in 1 vaccine that protects against diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, polio, Hib disease and hep B.
  2. PCV (pneumococcal conjugate vaccine).
  3. Rotavirus vaccine
  4. MenB vaccine
19
Q

What vaccines are given at 12 weeks?

A
  1. 2nd dose of 6 in 1 vaccine

2. 2nd dose of Rotavirus vaccine

20
Q

What vaccines are given at 16 weeks?

A
  1. 3rd dose of 6 in 1 vaccine
  2. 2nd dose of PCV
  3. 2nd dose of MenB vaccine
21
Q

What vaccines are given at 12 to 13 months?

A
  1. Hib/MenC vaccine
  2. MMR vaccine
  3. PCV booster
  4. MenB booster
22
Q

What vaccines are given from 2 years up to school year 5?

A

Nasal flu vaccine

23
Q

What vaccines are given at 3 years and 4 months?

A
  1. MMR booster

2. Pre-school booster (4 in 1 vaccine) protects against diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis and polio.

24
Q

What vaccines are given in teenage years?

A
  1. HPV vaccine
  2. Teenage booster - protects against tetanus, diphtheria and polio
  3. MenACWY vaccine - protects against 4 types of menigococcal disease
25
Q

What vaccines are given to older adults and risk groups?

A
  1. Inactivated flu vaccine
  2. Shingles vaccine
  3. PPV

Pregnant women

  1. Inactivated flu vaccine
  2. Pertussis