Vaccine-induced enhancement of viral infections
http://tiny.cc/M5P8t
W. Huisman
Vaccine
Volume 27, Issue 4, 22 January 2009, Pages 505-512
Abstract
Examples of vaccine-induced enhancement of susceptibility to virus infection or
of aberrant viral pathogenesis have been documented for infections by members of
different virus families. Several mechanisms, many of which still are poorly
understood, are at the basis of this phenomenon. Vaccine development for
lentivirus infections in general, and for HIV/AIDS in particular, has been
little successful. Certain experimental lentiviral vaccines even proved to be
counterproductive: they rendered vaccinated subjects more susceptible to
infection rather than protecting them. For vaccine-induced enhanced
susceptibility to infection with certain viruses like feline coronavirus, Dengue
virus, and feline immunodeficiency virus, it has been shown that
antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE) plays an important role. Other mechanisms
may, either in the absence of or in combination with ADE, be involved.
Consequently, vaccine-induced enhancement has been a major stumble block in the
development of certain flavi-, corona-, paramyxo-, and lentivirus vaccines. Also
recent failures in the development of a vaccine against HIV may at least in part
be attributed to induction of enhanced susceptibility to infection. There may
well be a delicate balance between the induction of protective immunity on the
one hand and the induction of enhanced susceptibility on the other. The present
paper reviews the currently known mechanisms of vaccine-induced enhancement of
susceptibility to virus infection or of aberrant viral pathogenesis.