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Severe pandemic H1N1 2009 infection is associated with transient NK and T deficiency and aberrant CD8 responses
Authors:Fox Annette  Le Nguyen Minh Hoa  Horby Peter  van Doorn H Rogier  Nguyen Vu Trung  Nguyen Hong Ha  Nguyen Trung Cap  Vu Dinh Phu  Nguyen Minh Ha  Diep Nguyen Thi Ngoc  Bich Vu Thi Ngoc  Huong Huong Tran Thi Kieu  Taylor Walter R  Farrar Jeremy  Wertheim Heiman  Nguyen Van Kinh
Affiliation:Oxford University Clinical Research Unit, Wellcome Trust Major Overseas Programme, Dong Da, Ha Noi, Viet Nam. afox@oucru.org
Abstract:

Background

It is unclear why the severity of influenza varies in healthy adults or why the burden of severe influenza shifts to young adults when pandemic strains emerge. One possibility is that cross-protective T cell responses wane in this age group in the absence of recent infection. We therefore compared the acute cellular immune response in previously healthy adults with severe versus mild pandemic H1N1 infection.

Methods and Principal Findings

49 previously healthy adults admitted to the National Hospital of Tropical Diseases, Viet Nam with RT-PCR-confirmed 2009 H1N1 infection were prospectively enrolled. 39 recovered quickly whereas 10 developed severe symptoms requiring supplemental oxygen and prolonged hospitalization. Peripheral blood lymphocyte subset counts and activation (HLADR, CD38) and differentiation (CD27, CD28) marker expression were determined on days 0, 2, 5, 10, 14 and 28 by flow cytometry. NK, CD4 and CD8 lymphopenia developed in 100%, 90% and 60% of severe cases versus 13% (p<0.001), 28%, (p = 0.001) and 18% (p = 0.014) of mild cases. CD4 and NK counts normalized following recovery. B cell counts were not significantly associated with severity. CD8 activation peaked 6–8 days after mild influenza onset, when 13% (6–22%) were HLADR+CD38+, and was accompanied by a significant loss of resting/CD27+CD28+ cells without accumulation of CD27+CD28− or CD27−CD28− cells. In severe influenza CD8 activation peaked more than 9 days post-onset, and/or was excessive (30–90% HLADR+CD38+) in association with accumulation of CD27+CD28− cells and maintenance of CD8 counts.

Conclusion

Severe influenza is associated with transient T and NK cell deficiency. CD8 phenotype changes during mild influenza are consistent with a rapidly resolving memory response whereas in severe influenza activation is either delayed or excessive, and partially differentiated cells accumulate within blood indicating that recruitment of effector cells to the lung could be impaired.
Keywords:
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