Vaccines (Apr 2024)

BCG Vaccination-Associated Lower HbA1c and Increased CD25 Expression on CD8<sup>+</sup> T Cells in Patients with Type 1 Diabetes in Ghana

  • Wilfred Aniagyei,
  • Sumaya Mohayideen,
  • Osei Sarfo-Kantanka,
  • Sarah Bittner,
  • Monika M. Vivekanandan,
  • Joseph F. Arthur,
  • Agnes O. Boateng,
  • Augustine Yeboah,
  • Hubert S. Ahor,
  • Shadrack O. Asibey,
  • Elizabeth Owusu,
  • Diran Herebian,
  • Maximilian Huttasch,
  • Volker Burkart,
  • Robert Wagner,
  • Michael Roden,
  • Ernest Adankwah,
  • Dorcas O. Owusu,
  • Ertan Mayatepek,
  • Marc Jacobsen,
  • Richard O. Phillips,
  • Julia Seyfarth

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines12050452
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 5
p. 452

Abstract

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BCG vaccination affects other diseases beyond tuberculosis by unknown—potentially immunomodulatory—mechanisms. Recent studies have shown that BCG vaccination administered during overt type 1 diabetes (T1D) improved glycemic control and affected immune and metabolic parameters. Here, we comprehensively characterized Ghanaian T1D patients with or without routine neonatal BCG vaccination to identify vaccine-associated alterations. Ghanaian long-term T1D patients (n = 108) and matched healthy controls (n = 214) were evaluated for disease-related clinical, metabolic, and immunophenotypic parameters and compared based on their neonatal BCG vaccination status. The majority of study participants were BCG-vaccinated at birth and no differences in vaccination rates were detected between the study groups. Notably, glycemic control metrics, i.e., HbA1c and IDAA1c, showed significantly lower levels in BCG-vaccinated as compared to unvaccinated patients. Immunophenotype comparisons identified higher expression of the T cell activation marker CD25 on CD8+ T cells from BCG-vaccinated T1D patients. Correlation analysis identified a negative correlation between HbA1c levels and CD25 expression on CD8+ T cells. In addition, we observed fractional increases in glycolysis metabolites (phosphoenolpyruvate and 2/3-phosphoglycerate) in BCG-vaccinated T1D patients. These results suggest that neonatal BCG vaccination is associated with better glycemic control and increased activation of CD8+ T cells in T1D patients.

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