Non-specific immunological effects of selected routine childhood immunisations: systematic review
BMJ 2016; 355 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.i5225 (Published 13 October 2016) Cite this as: BMJ 2016;355:i5225- Rama Kandasamy, paediatric clinical research fellow1 2,
- Merryn Voysey, senior statistician1 2 3,
- Fiona McQuaid, paediatric clinical research fellow1 2,
- Karlijn de Nie, research assistant1 2,
- Rebecca Ryan, medical student1 2,
- Olivia Orr, medical student1 2,
- Ulrike Uhlig, specialist paediatric registrar4,
- Charles Sande, postdoctoral researcher1 2,
- Daniel O’Connor, postdoctoral researcher1 2,
- Andrew J Pollard, professor of paediatric infection and immunity1 2
- 1Oxford Vaccine Group, Department of Paediatrics, University of Oxford, Churchill Hospital, Oxford OX3 7LE, UK
- 2NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research Centre, Oxford, OX3 7LE, UK
- 3Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, OX2 6GG, UK
- 4Department of Paediatrics, Children’s Hospital Oxford, Oxford University Hospitals NHS Trust, Oxford, OX3 9DU, UK
- Correspondence to: R Kandasamy rama.kandasamy{at}paediatrics.ox.ac.uk
- Accepted 20 September 2016
Abstract
Objective To identify and characterise non-specific immunological effects after routine childhood vaccines against BCG, measles, diphtheria, pertussis, and tetanus.
Design Systematic review of randomised controlled trials, cohort studies, and case-control studies.
Data sources Embase, PubMed, Cochrane library, and Trip searched between 1947 and January 2014. Publications submitted by a panel of experts in the specialty were also included.
Eligibility criteria for selecting studies All human studies reporting non-specific immunological effects after vaccination with standard childhood immunisations. Studies using recombinant vaccines, no vaccine at all, or reporting only vaccine specific outcomes were excluded. The primary aim was to systematically identify, assemble, and review all available studies and data on the possible non-specific or heterologous immunological effects of BCG; measles; mumps, measles, and rubella (MMR); diphtheria; tetanus; and pertussis vaccines.
Results The initial search yielded 11 168 references; 77 manuscripts met the inclusion criteria for data analysis. In most included studies (48%) BCG was the vaccine intervention. The final time point of outcome measurement was primarily performed (70%) between one and 12 months after vaccination. There was a high risk of bias in the included studies, with no single study rated low risk across all assessment criteria. A total of 143 different immunological variables were reported, which, in conjunction with differences in measurement units and summary statistics, created a high number of combinations thus precluding any meta-analysis. Studies that compared BCG vaccinated with unvaccinated groups showed a trend towards increased IFN-γ production in vitro in the vaccinated groups. Increases were also observed for IFN-γ measured after BCG vaccination in response to in vitro stimulation with microbial antigens from Candida albicans, tetanus toxoid, Staphylococcus aureas, lipopolysaccharide, and hepatitis B. Cohort studies of measles vaccination showed an increase in lymphoproliferation to microbial antigens from tetanus toxoid and C albicans. Increases in immunogenicity to heterologous antigens were noted after diphtheria-tetanus (herpes simplex virus and polio antibody titres) and diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis (pneumococcus serotype 14 and polio neutralising responses) vaccination.
Conclusions The papers reporting non-specific immunological effects had heterogeneous study designs and could not be conventionally meta-analysed, providing a low level of evidence quality. Some studies, such as BCG vaccine studies examining in vitro IFN-γ responses and measles vaccine studies examining lymphoproliferation to microbial antigen stimulation, showed a consistent direction of effect suggestive of non-specific immunological effects. The quality of the evidence, however, does not provide confidence in the nature, magnitude, or timing of non-specific immunological effects after vaccination with BCG, diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus, or measles containing vaccines nor the clinical importance of the findings.
Introduction
Many published reports and commentaries have suggested that several vaccines routinely administered to infants could have heterologous or non-specific effects on mortality, unrelated to the prevention of illness and deaths caused by the specific diseases against which the vaccines were developed.1 2 3 For example, studies have suggested that receipt of both the BCG and measles vaccine are associated with a reduced risk of death (that is, all cause mortality) beyond that expected by a reduction in deaths from measles and tuberculosis, while receipt of diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis (DTP) vaccine might be associated with an increased risk of death, at least among female infants.4 5 6 Nearly all studies that showed these effects were observational or derived from secondary analyses. Consequently, poorly controlled or uncontrolled confounding and various types of selection and information bias have been suggested as alternative justifications for these findings.7 8
The biological plausibility of one or more vaccines having heterologous effects, either detrimental or beneficial, is supported by several studies in animals and observations in humans.9 10 11 12 Indeed it is these heterologous properties that are exploited in specific circumstances in adults in whom BCG has been used for the treatment of bladder cancer and melanoma, while MMR has been used as a treatment for warts.13 14 15 Nevertheless, the biological mechanisms and immune pathways that could underlie and rationalise such effects remain largely unspecified. The WHO Strategic Advisory Group of Experts (SAGE) requested the WHO Secretariat to review the evidence surrounding the possible non-specific/heterologous effects of vaccines included in the routine infant immunisation schedule in 2013.16 The WHO Secretariat working group commissioned this review to determine whether the current evidence is sufficient to warrant further scientific investigation and, if so, to define the path towards obtaining unequivocal evidence on these issues that would support future robust, evidence based adjustments to immunisation policies, if warranted.
The possible implications of any such heterologous effects of vaccines for the formulation or re-formulation of the infant immunisation schedule remain unclear, but it has been suggested that if such effects can be established beyond a reasonable doubt, the infant immunisation schedule might need to be reconfigured.16 Previous reviews, including periodic assessments by the WHO Global Advisory Committee on Vaccine Safety, have indicated that any such effects remain inconclusive and are therefore not a justification for altering the current schedule recommendations.17 At the meeting of SAGE during which the data from this review were presented, no changes to the current policy were recommended.18
We systematically identified, assemble, reviewed, and critically appraised all available human studies with immunological endpoints describing the possible non-specific or heterologous effects of BCG, diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus, and measles containing vaccines.
Methods
Definitions
We defined specific immunological effects as an effect of immunisation on an immunological variable in response to an antigen contained within the initial immunisation. The terms heterologous and non-targeted effects have also been used in the literature to describe non-specific immunological effects. For the purpose of this review we defined non-specific immunological effects as an effect on the immune system as a result of immunisation that modifies the way it subsequently responds to antigens that were not present in the initial immunisation.
Study design and selection criteria
Using a comprehensive search strategy, we identified and critically appraised available evidence (published and unpublished) that addressed possible non-specific effects of vaccines. We included in the review randomised controlled trials, quasi-randomised control trials, clinical trials, cohort studies, case-control studies, case series, and case reports. The vaccines examined included live attenuated vaccines (BCG and measles containing vaccines), inactivated vaccines, and toxoids (all diphtheria and tetanus toxoids, and Bordetella pertussis containing vaccines). Though the target population was infants aged under 5, inclusion of studies was not limited to this age group to ensure all relevant studies were identified. Sex, age at vaccination, and co-administration of vitamin A were examined as possible effect measure modifiers.
Were excluded ecological, animal, and in vitro studies; studies using recombinant vaccines or no vaccine at all; and those studies reporting/generating only immunological endpoints specific to the study vaccine.
Search strategy
Embase.com, which includes all records from Medline, was searched from 1947 to December 2012 (appendix 1). Complementary, less extensive searches of the PubMed library, the Cochrane library, and trip database, were performed to detect any articles missed by the search on Embase.com. In addition, we manually searched the reference lists of all included articles found and all relevant review articles to identify studies not included in the previously described search. Experts in the specialty were asked if they were aware of any unpublished reports of studies possibly meeting the inclusion criteria. Full text of all articles identified were sought, using internet downloads, interlibrary loans, and contacting of authors. Articles in any language were sought. We carried out a further limited search from December 2012 to January 2014 in the PubMed library using the same search terms to provide an update. Experts in the specialty were also asked to review the initial search results and identify any further studies that could be included.
Data extraction
We used specifically created data extraction forms and DistillerSR software to acquire consistent data from studies, such as participants, methods, potential confounders and background data. All relevant data were extracted from articles meeting inclusion criteria and entered on the database. There was no pre-specified effect measure that was of interest but rather all summary estimates of effect were extracted whenever possible.
Selection of eligible Studies
Two independent reviewers examined each full text article, and a database of studies considered eligible for inclusion was created (tables A-F in appendix 2). We included in the review studies identified by both reviewers as being eligible for inclusion and having adequate data for extraction. Authors of studies in which non-specific immunological data were generated but not reported were requested to provide data. When there were discrepancies, the reasons for these were discussed, and a decision about inclusion was reached by consensus. If there was no agreement, a further independent reviewer adjudicated to make a final decision regarding eligibility.
Assessment of risk of bias
At least two independent reviewers assessed each included study according to the Cochrane Library risk of bias tool (tables G-L, appendix 2). When there was a conflict in the assessment, a third independent reviewer adjudicated to make a final decision. The overall risk of bias was calculated by assigning each criteria a score of 0 for high, 1 for unclear, and 2 for low and then averaging the total score across all of the criteria.
Data analysis
We generated descriptive tables summarising information about study design, study quality, and results of all included studies. Data on non-specific immunological effects were extracted from papers, which reported summary statistics in tabular form. When results were presented in figures, we extracted data whenever possible with GetData Graph Digitizer version 2.26.0.20.
We summarised the overall immunological outcomes of the included studies graphically for all available variables to provide a perspective on the effect of vaccination on these variables. We calculated the direction of effect for each variable by creating a ratio of the response in those vaccinated compared with the response in the unvaccinated participants, or alternatively the ratio of the estimated response after vaccination compared with the response before vaccination. The response could be presented as a median, mean, geometric mean, fold-rise, or proportion of seroconversion, depending on the statistics reported in the paper. Participants were not all measured at comparable time points across studies nor were of similar age. We could not formally combine these ratios as they are statistically non-comparable, the timings differ, and many studies did not present estimates of variability. Not all studies reported results of significance tests and for those that did the statistical test reported was not always the appropriate one. Furthermore, because of the multitude of variables tested and small study sizes, there were related multiple testing issues that would have increased the rate of type 1 errors. For these reasons we designed the plots to be descriptive of the overall diversity of responses and point to any general trends that could be occurring in the data without the calculation of any summary statistics or testing specific hypotheses that would have required more consistent data. For papers that reported comparisons at multiple time points for the same children we plotted only the first comparison so that each cohort of children is reported only once per study per variable per type of stimulant.
Patient involvement
No patients were involved in setting the research question or the outcome measures, nor were they involved in the design and implementation of the study. There are no plans to involve patients in dissemination.
Results
The search yielded 11 168 references, and 77 studies met our eligibility criteria (fig 1⇓). Fourteen of these studies were from submissions made by experts in the specialty. Of the two studies published on the randomised controlled trial by Burl and colleagues, we included additional data from the associated PhD thesis.19 We identified relatively equal proportions of randomised controlled trials, cohort studies, and case-control studies (table 1⇓). There was a wide range (3-2345; mean 206) of total study participants involved across the studies. Most studies (37/77, 48%) used BCG as the study vaccine intervention, while 47/77 (61%) were exclusively conducted in children. In 54/77 (70%) studies, the final time point of outcome measurement was performed between one and 12 months after vaccination. At least one non-specific immunological variable was reported as significant in 29/77 (38%) of the studies (tables 2-5⇓). Because of the heterogeneity, we could not conduct a meta-analysis and for that reason none of the trends, where evident, are statistically sound.
BCG vaccine studies
Overall 37 studies were identified that measured non-specific immunological effects of BCG vaccination (appendix 2). In 11 of these papers, the results of assays conducted were not reported as they were not the main focus of the paper. Of the included studies, 24 enrolled children aged under 5 years. Twenty papers reported non-specific immunological effects with data reported in tables or graphs, which could be extracted with a digitizer program, and one study supplied raw data. These papers reported 89 different immunological variables. There were 20 types of stimulants used in theses assays, resulting in 167 unique combinations.
Immunological responses from unstimulated and phytohaemagglutinin (PHA) stimulated cultures were most commonly reported (fig 2⇓; appendix 4 provides detailed tabulated data for the figure). No general patterns according to pro-inflammatory or anti-inflammatory classifications were observable for unstimulated responses when comparisons were between vaccinated and unvaccinated groups, though a distinct increase in IFN-γ was noted within one cohort study reporting cytokine responses in unstimulated cultures after BCG vaccination.20
Cytokine responses in PHA stimulated cultures showed a trend towards increases in vaccinated compared with unvaccinated groups for all cytokines, although there were studies assessing the pro-inflammatory cytokines IFN-γ and TNF-α that also fell below the null value. In comparisons of cytokine responses in PHA stimulated cultures before and after vaccination within a cohort study, there was a trend towards an increase in pro-inflammatory cytokines and a decrease in anti-inflammatory cytokines.
IFN-γ was the most commonly reported immunological variable. Data for IFN-γ were extracted from 11 papers and one PhD thesis and one study author supplied unpublished raw data from unstimulated assays on request (fig 2⇑). Those studies that made comparisons between vaccinated and unvaccinated groups showed a trend towards an increase in IFN-γ after stimulation. Increases after vaccination were observed in a small cohort study of IFN-γ measured in response to in vitro stimulation with Candida albicans and Staphylococcus aureas.22
T cells and T cell subsets were the most commonly reported leukocyte variable (fig 2⇑). Ex vivo total leukocyte counts had larger cohort sizes and trended around the null value. Counts of subsets for vaccinated compared with unvaccinated groups showed a decrease in neutrophils, CD8, and γδ+ T cells; increase in CD4 T cells and monocytes; and no consistent direction for eosinophils. Cohort studies that compared values before and after vaccination showed an increase in total lymphocytes and CD14+ cells, decrease in αβ+ T cells, and inconsistent effect for γδ+ T cells.22 26 In vitro proliferation assays to tetanus toxoid and hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) all showed increases in the vaccinated compared with unvaccinated group.25 48
Measles vaccine studies
Various different measles vaccine strains and titres were used, with the Edmonston-Zagreb and Schwarz strains most commonly applied (appendix 2, table B). Data available from measles studies reported 23 different immunological variables including B cells, β2 microglobin, CD4, CD4:CD8 ratio, CD8, IFN-γ, IL-10, IL-2, sIL-2Ra, IL-4, IL-6, lymphocytes, lymphoproliferation, malaria parasites, MIP-1β, Neopterin, sCD4, sCD8, T-cell proliferation, TNF-α, and total white blood cell count (WBC). There were six types of stimulants used in these assays (including C albicans, PHA, and tetanus toxoid), resulting in 31 unique combinations. All the papers contained children aged under 5.
In studies of PHA stimulated assays IFN-γ was the most commonly reported variable followed by IL-10 (fig 3⇓; appendix 4 provides detailed tabulated data for the figure). One study that compared responses between vaccinated groups showed an increase in IFN-γ, IL-2, and IL-10 in the vaccinated compared with the control group.35 The remaining responses to PHA were all from cohort studies and did not show a consistent direction of effect for any of the variables except for sIL-2Ra and β2 microglobulin, which showed small relative increases after vaccination in relatively smaller cohort sizes. Cohort studies in which unstimulated assays were conducted showed decreases in IL-4, MIP-1β, and sIL-2Rα and no consistent direction of response for IFN-γ (fig G in appendix 3).
Lymphoproliferation was reported in response to tetanus toxoid, Candida species, and PHA stimulation as well as unstimulated assays (fig 3⇑). In cohort studies reporting responses to C albicans and tetanus toxoid, lymphoproliferation was consistently raised after vaccination. Total T cell proliferation was consistently reduced and soluble CD8 responses were consistently increased after PHA stimulation. One study that compared vaccinated with unvaccinated children showed overall values for ex vivo white blood cell counts and in vitro proliferative responses by unstimulated lymphocyte and CD4 T cells that lay close to the null.32
MMR vaccine studies
Overall data were extracted from three papers reporting responses to non-specific stimuli in MMR studies (table C, appendix 2). Two papers conducted studies in children aged under 5, while the third followed up vaccinated infants at mean age of 6.14 years. These papers reported 10 different immunological variables using five types of stimulants, resulting in 13 unique combinations.
CD4, and CD8 responses were the most commonly reported variables in cohort studies of T cell proliferation in response to PHA stimulation (fig 3⇑). T cell proliferation in response to PHA stimulation was consistently reduced. Unstimulated CD4 responses also trended towards a reduction while unstimulated CD8 responses had no consistent direction of effect.
Tetanus vaccine studies
Ten studies reported responses to non-specific stimuli after tetanus vaccination (table D in appendix 2). They reported 21 different immunological variables (primarily lymphocyte proliferation and cytokines) and used 14 types of stimulants, resulting in 36 unique combinations. Only one study (by Borut and colleagues39) involved children aged under 5, who made up only a fraction of the total study cohort.
Two studies reported cytokine production to mitogens after tetanus toxoid vaccination. After PHA stimulation, increases in IFN-γ and IL-13 were noted in participants with non-allergic rhinitis compared with allergic rhinitis.41 One study included women randomised to palm oil or placebo and compared lymphoproliferative responses before and 56 days after vaccine receipt; stimulation with concanavalin A (ConA) resulted in higher IFN-γ and IL-4 titres in both groups, while lipopolysaccharide generated higher IL-6 titres only in women who received palm oil.45 Age seemed to play a role in blastogenesis to ConA and PHA after tetanus toxoid vaccination, with reduced responses in elderly adults compared with young adults.38 One study that examined skin test responses to tetanus toxoid noted that there was increased monocyte chemotaxis in those participants with positive skin test responses.39
DTP, DT, and pertussis vaccine studies
One study explored the effect of vitamin A on cytokine (IFN-γ, TNF-α, IL-10, IL-5, and IL-13) responses in relation to receipt of DTP vaccination and noted no significant differences (fig H in appendix 3).49 This study, however, did report a significant decrease in monocyte count in the group not receiving vitamin A in conjunction with DTP. Interestingly, one DT (diphtheria-tetanus) and one DTP study showed vaccine interference. The DT study showed increased herpes simplex virus and polio antibody titres, while the DTP study showed an increase in antibody to pneumococcus serotype 14 and polio neutralising responses.
We identified 10 studies that contained assays of non-specific immunological responses after immunisation with DTP or DT (table E in appendix 2). Notably, five studies reported to have or were likely to have co-administered a polio vaccine.
One study reported the comparison of a monovalent to trivalent pertussis vaccine in adults (table F in appendix 2).50 In this study culture stimulation indices to tetanus toxoid stimulation were measured but no statistical testing was performed.
Discussion
Principal findings
This is the first systematic review of non-specific immunological effects after human vaccination. Study designs were heterogeneous, and we could not carry out a meta-analysis. Included studies also had a low level of evidence quality. We could not conclude from the current available data that there are any consistent findings to confirm or discard the occurrence of non-specific immunological effects after vaccination with BCG, diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus, or measles containing vaccines. In addition, data from the included papers were not presented in a form that allowed us to assess the effect of sex on non-specific immunological effects. More meaningful conclusions might be drawn if raw data analyses could be conducted with unpublished and published data. If the same summary statistics could be computed for each study then meta-analysis might be possible, though there would still remain large diversity in study design, timing of assessments, and age at vaccination.
Strengths and limitations
Our review showed that a multitude of variables have been used to assess non-specific immunological effects of vaccines over the past six decades. Many of these are reported only once, and it is in these situations that single significant P values need to be interpreted with caution. Stronger evidence for any effect can be found when more than one study has assessed the same variable and when confirmatory results can be found from different studies.
The improvement in technology for testing immunological variables (such as multiplex assays) allows multiple tests to be assessed at one time with one blood sample and greatly increases the chances of false positive results occurring because of chance alone. The standard arbitrary cut point used for significance testing in these situations (P<0.05) means that there is a 5% chance of a false positive result with every P value computed. If a study reports the results of a multiplex assay testing multiple separate variables and each one is tested at the P<0.05 level, then the chances that one of those variables will show a significant difference where none exists is high.
Comparison with other studies
Conceptually, we would expect heterogeneity of responses because the reported variables are singular measures of a complex biological system where a matrix of positive and negative responses by immunological variables can be seen. It is also important to consider potential confounders that could play a role—for example, contamination might explain some changes in unstimulated culture systems. Notably, this review shows some consistent patterns of effect that could be relevant in an immunological context. For example, in most studies that reported IFN-γ responses in people vaccinated with BCG, there was an increase in production of the cytokine in unstimulated and stimulated in vitro conditions, both over time within a cohort and within groups that had received BCG compared with controls. The cytokine profile of PHA stimulated assays from BCG studies also showed a trend towards a pro-inflammatory response in cohort studies. Interestingly, the studies comparing vaccinated versus control groups indicate a more general increase in both pro-inflammatory and anti-inflammatory profiles. This suggests that the effect seen in the cohort studies could be ontogenetic in nature, consistent with in vitro studies of human blood stimulated with toll-like receptor agonists that show an increase in pro-inflammatory and decrease in anti-inflammatory cytokines during infancy.51
Three study cohorts assessed proliferative and IFN-γ responses to HBsAg stimulation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells after BCG vaccination.23 25 In two, IFN-γ showed an increase in the respective variable for the vaccinated compared with the control group.25 Interestingly, responses to bacterial and fungal antigens in both BCG and measles vaccine studies showed increases in the respective variables measured. These findings are consistent with the results of animal studies that have shown acquired cellular resistance as a result of altered responsiveness of monocytes and macrophages.52 This is supported by the trend towards an increase in monocyte responses in BCG vaccinated compared with control groups in this review. Furthermore, both animal and human studies support a role for activation of innate pattern recognition receptors triggering metabolic pathways and epigenetic changes that result in this response.53 22
Conclusions and policy implications
The lack of clear high quality evidence does not confirm or exclude the possibility of non-specific immunological effects after vaccination, which are well described in animal studies and accepted by many immunologists as occurring in humans.54 55 The human data, however, do not provide the necessary evidence to provide any confidence in the nature, quality, quantity, kinetics, or impact of non-specific immunological effects in young children after vaccination nor its translation into explaining morbidity or mortality outcomes.
Measurement of conventional immunological variables (such as antibody titres and cellular responses) provides little mechanistic insight into the relatedness of vaccination to an epidemiological outcome. Technological advances, however, mean that it might now be possible to design studies that can examine this issue systematically. For example, by using systems biology approaches, studies on yellow fever and influenza vaccination have uncovered some key processes that drive vaccine immune responses.56 57 In addition, studies examining disease conditions (including infectious causes) have described the roles specific molecular pathways play in susceptibility.58 Thus systems biology provides an avenue for describing the biological networks that are perturbed by immunisation and how these can mechanistically relate to well defined epidemiological outcomes such as susceptibility to infectious disease. In addition, it has advantages in being able to incorporate complex considerations such as multiple vaccine antigens administered simultaneously. By examining how the molecular expression profiles generated after vaccination relate to those found at the time of a measured epidemiological outcome it would be possible to identify whether heterologous effects exist and, if so, how they exert their effects. Further validation would then be required perhaps in animal models or using in vitro systems.
Design of studies that would aid understanding of heterologous effects of vaccines should take account of four key considerations: identification of the main endpoints (morbidity or mortality) that will be used to assess the importance of any observed immunological effects; strategies to take account of the complexity of multiple antigens given at one time; the order in which vaccines are given in the immunisation schedule; and which biological measurements to use in the assessment. To appropriately examine these considerations it is necessary to undertake pilot mechanistic studies that would use new technological approaches to identify suitable laboratory variables to study in a larger epidemiological study with relevant endpoints. These studies would most readily be carried out in small cohorts of adults or animal based studies in which multiple sampling time points can be acquired, analysed with new high throughput technology such as standardised cellular phenotyping59 and multiplex serological assays coupled with the high dimensional molecular systems biology approaches to define these mechanisms.
Future detailed studies using a systems biology approach to capture the transcriptional, epigenetic, and immunological effects of vaccines could provide data on the timing, duration, quality, and magnitude of such effects. This would entail a rigorous statistical approach to correct for multiple testing. It is particularly important to gain an understanding of whether any such measurable effects are able to influence future inflammatory or innate/acquired immunological responses to exposure with vaccines or infectious agents. If reproducible signals are identified, these could be used in large scale studies with relevant epidemiological endpoints in children to characterise the clinical importance of such vaccine effects.
What is already known on this topic
Observational studies across a limited geographical distribution have suggested the presence of non-specific effects on all cause mortality for BCG, measles, diphtheria, pertussis, and tetanus vaccines
No causal immunological mechanism has yet been elucidated
What this study adds
In some BCG and measles vaccine studies, there are consistent trends or patterns of immunological response after vaccination that are suggestive of non-specific immunological effects
There is no conclusive immunological evidence from previously conducted human studies to support the presence of clinically relevant, geographically generalisable, non-specific immunological effects after vaccination with BCG, diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus, or measles containing vaccines
Footnotes
We acknowledge the support provided by WHO, Department of Immunization Vaccines and Biologicals, and all the members of the WHO SAGE working group on non-specific effects of vaccines. We also thank Henry Ebron and Peter O’Blenis for their support in using DistillerSR software.
Contributors: RK performed screening, selected articles for inclusions, assessed risk of bias, analysed data, and wrote the report. MV extracted and analysed the data. FMcQ performed screening, selected articles for inclusion, and assessed risk of bias. CS, DO’C, KdN, RR, OO, and UU performed screening and extracted data. AJP revised the protocol, performed screening, and adjudicated on conflicts on article inclusion and risk of bias assessment. All authors approved this version for publication. All authors, external and internal, had full access to all of the data (including statistical reports and tables) in the study and can take responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis. RK and AJP are guarantors.
Funding: This work was supported by WHO. The work was commissioned as an independent evidence review by WHO. WHO staff provided advice about the topic area throughout the project and implemented the search of bibliographic databases.
Competing interests: All authors have completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form at www.icmje.org/coi_disclosure.pdf (available on request from the corresponding author) and declare that AJP has previously conducted vaccine studies on behalf of Oxford University that were sponsored by manufacturers of vaccines but does not receive any personal payments from them. The University of Oxford has received unrestricted educational grants from vaccine manufacturers.
Ethical approval: Not required.
Data sharing: No additional data available. A copy of the review protocol is available from the corresponding author.
Transparency: The lead author affirms that the manuscript is an honest, accurate, and transparent account of the study being reported; that no important aspects of the study have been omitted; and that any discrepancies from the study as planned (and, if relevant, registered) have been explained.
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