Immunity & Ageing (May 2020)

The immune response to influenza in older humans: beyond immune senescence

  • Janet E. McElhaney,
  • Chris P. Verschoor,
  • Melissa K. Andrew,
  • Laura Haynes,
  • George A. Kuchel,
  • Graham Pawelec

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12979-020-00181-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Despite widespread influenza vaccination programs, influenza remains a major cause of morbidity and mortality in older adults. Age-related changes in multiple aspects of the adaptive immune response to influenza have been well-documented including a decline in antibody responses to influenza vaccination and changes in the cell-mediated response associated with immune senescence. This review will focus on T cell responses to influenza and influenza vaccination in older adults, and how increasing frailty or coexistence of multiple (≥2) chronic conditions contributes to the loss of vaccine effectiveness for the prevention of hospitalization. Further, dysregulation of the production of pro- and anti-inflammatory mediators contributes to a decline in the generation of an effective CD8 T cell response needed to clear influenza virus from the lungs. Current influenza vaccines provide only a weak stimulus to this arm of the adaptive immune response and rely on re-stimulation of CD8 T cell memory related to prior exposure to influenza virus. Efforts to improve vaccine effectiveness in older adults will be fruitless until CD8 responses take center stage.

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