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Infection and Immunity, February 2004, p. 818-823, Vol. 72, No. 2
0019-9567/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.72.2.818-823.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Pediatrics, Erasmus MC-Sophia, Rotterdam,1 Department of Pulmonology, Medisch Spectrum Twente,2 Regional Laboratory of Public Health, Enschede, The Netherlands3
Received 29 August 2003/ Returned for modification 9 October 2003/ Accepted 12 November 2003
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We hypothesize that the prevention of bacterial growth in the airways of COPD patients will significantly decrease the occurrence of exacerbation and thus improve the quality of life for COPD patients. One of the pathogens that is frequently involved in colonization and infection of COPD patients is S. pneumoniae. For this pathogen, a 23-valent polysaccharide vaccine and a 7-valent conjugate vaccine are available. The 23-valent vaccine is protective against pneumococcal invasive disease in adults and elderly patients, but not in children under the age of two or immunocompromised patients (14). In addition, the 23-valent polysaccharide vaccine has not shown a significant reduction in cases of pneumonia in elderly patients (7). Moreover, the polysaccharide vaccine induces no immunological memory, which necessitates revaccination (2). In contrast, the conjugate vaccine is effective in young children against invasive as well as mucosal diseases and elicits immunological memory, but it covers fewer (7) serotypes. To investigate the relevance of pneumococcal colonization and infection in COPD patients, we determined the effect of pneumococcal colonization on the development of exacerbation. In addition, to assess the theoretical role of pneumococcal vaccination in COPD patients, we determined the serotype distribution among pneumococcal sputum isolates found during colonization and infection. Finally, we investigated the presence of immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies against pneumococcal capsular polysaccharides in COPD patients and the development of capsule-specific antibodies as a result of pneumococcal infection during exacerbation.
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None of the patients were vaccinated with pneumococcal vaccines before entering the study. Sputum samples were retrieved at 0, 4, 7, and 10 months, provided that the disease was stable, and during exacerbation. Serum was collected during acute exacerbation (acute-phase serum) and 2 weeks after exacerbation (convalescent-phase serum). The diagnosis of exacerbation was made based on the following criteria: (i) an objective exacerbation, with a >15% decrease in lung function (FEV1) and/or a 300-ml decrease in FEV1; (ii) a subjective exacerbation assessed by means of a symptom checklist and a 2-week diary; and (iii) a clinical exacerbation, as judged by the patient's own chest physician (19).
Sputum cultures. Sputa were collected at scheduled visits to the outpatient department and in cases of exacerbation. The sputum samples were collected in sterile vials and transported to the microbiology laboratory within 4 h. Sputum samples were judged microscopically with a low-magnification lens (x100) and had to contain <10 epithelial cells and >25 leukocytes per field to be considered representative bronchial samples. A fixed volume of a 1:100 dilution of sputum was plated onto blood agar, chocolate agar, MacConkey agar, and Sabouraud agar. The identification of bacterial growth was performed by standard techniques (10). S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae, M. catarrhalis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus, Aspergillus, and Candida species and other gram-negative rods were considered to be potential pathogens. Other bacterial species were classified as normal flora.
Bacterial colonization was defined as the presence of bacteria in a culture retrieved from the lower respiratory tract of a clinically stable COPD patient (5). A bacterial infection was defined by the presence of one or more potential pathogens in a COPD patient with a clinical exacerbation. A monoculture was defined as the growth of a single bacterial species, whereas the presence of multiple bacterial species was defined as a mixed culture.
Serotyping of pneumococcal isolates. In total, 115 pneumococcal isolates were cultured and serotyped by the capsular swelling method (Quellung reaction), using commercially available antisera (Statens Serum Institute, Copenhagen, Denmark) and microscopic observation.
EIA for measuring anti-pneumococcal polysaccharide IgG concentrations. Concentrations of IgG antibodies were measured by an enzyme immunoassay (EIA) method as described previously (9). The results are given in micrograms per milliliter, calculated from the officially assigned IgG values of the 89-SF reference serum (15), or were converted into units per milliliter by comparison with the 89-SF reference serum, which was considered to contain 100 U/ml, in cases for which no IgG values were available.
EIA for measuring the avidity of anti-pneumococcal polysaccharide antibodies. The relative avidities of IgG antibodies for pneumococcal capsular polysaccharides were determined by the EIA method as described by Anttila et al. (1), with some minor modifications. Briefly, microtiter plates (Maxisorp; Nunc, Roskilde, Denmark) were coated overnight with 100 µl of coating solution, containing capsule polysaccharides at a concentration of 10 µg/ml (LGC Promochem, Teddington, United Kingdom), per well. Sera were diluted 1:50 in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) containing 5% cell wall polysaccharides (Statens Serum Institute) and incubated at 4°C overnight. Sera were diluted 1:100 in PBS-0.05% Tween 20, and threefold serial dilutions were incubated for 2 h at 37°C. After washing, 0.5 M sodium thiocyanate in PBS was added to dissociate antibody-antigen complexes. After 15 min of incubation at room temperature, the plates were washed and antibody binding was detected by the addition of alkaline-phosphatase-conjugated anti-human IgG (Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.). The color was developed by the substrate p-nitrophenyl phosphate (Sigma). The absorbance was measured at 405 nm on an EIA reader (SpectraMAX; Molecular Devices, Sunnyvale, Calif.). Results were expressed as avidity index (AI) values, assigned as the percentages of antibodies that remained bound to the antigens after thiocyanate treatment. The high-avidity antibody concentration was calculated by multiplying the antibody concentration by the AI value. The reproducibility of the assay was checked by including a control serum in each plate.
Data analysis. The results were analyzed with the statistical software SPSS 10. The effect of pneumococcal colonization on the time to the first exacerbation episode was assessed by using multivariate Cox proportional hazard analyses. We adjusted for potential confounding variables, including age, sex, smoking status, number of exacerbation episodes in the preceding year, and FEV1% predicted, as found previously (P. van der Valk, D. Bogaert, E. Monninkhof, J. van der Palen, P. Hermans, G. Zielhuis, C. van Herwaarden, and R. Hendriks, submitted for publication). The initial concentrations of antibodies are depicted as geometric mean concentrations (GMC). Avidities are given as the means of the AI values and high-avidity antibody concentrations. Statistical comparisons between antibody levels were performed by analysis of variance and independent sample t tests. The maximum increase in antibody titer was tested for significance by using the one-sample t test. Statistical significance was set at P values of <0.05.
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We calculated the effect of the colonization status at the time of randomization on the time to the next exacerbation episode for 209 patients from whom sputum was available at that time. We adjusted for potential confounding variables, including age, sex, smoking status, number of exacerbations in the preceding year, and FEV1% predicted. Bacterial colonization in general did not increase the risk of a first exacerbation compared to noncolonized patients, nor did pneumococcal colonization in general (hazard ratio, 1.31; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.743 to 2.305). However, the adjusted hazard ratio for the development of exacerbations in patients with a pneumococcal monoculture was 2.93 (95% CI, 1.41 to 6.07).
We investigated all 115 pneumococcal isolates in detail by means of serotyping. The most prevalent serotypes were serotypes 19F and 3 (13 and 10%, respectively), followed by serotypes 14, 9L/N/V, 23A/B, and 11 (9% each) (Table 1). The theoretical vaccine coverages for the 7-valent and 11-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccines and the 23-valent polysaccharide vaccine were 34, 47, and 70%, respectively. Inclusion of the expected cross-reactive serotypes increased the theoretical coverages to 60, 73, and 88%, respectively. A separate analysis of the potential vaccine coverage of pneumococcal isolates found during a stable state and exacerbation showed no significant difference (Table 1).
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TABLE 1. Most prevalent pneumococcal serotypes observed in COPD patients
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TABLE 2. GMCs (µg/ml) of anti-pneumococcal antibodies against the seven conjugate vaccine pneumococcal serotypes
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FIG. 1. Capsular antibody titers against the seven pneumococcal conjugate vaccine serotypes in 92 COPD patients at the start of the study. Error bars show 95% CIs for the GMCs for IgG antibodies (A), AIs (B), and high-avidity antibody titers (C). (D) Error bars show 95% CIs for mean maximum antibody increases and mean maximum high-avidity antibody increases for the homologous serotype during exacerbation.
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We investigated the development of antibodies in response to colonization with pneumococci during acute exacerbation. In total, 15 patients, who were colonized with serotypes 14 (4), 9N (4), 9V (3), 19F (3), and 11 (1), were studied during an exacerbation. We investigated the antibody levels in serum and the AIs of the antibodies against the capsular polysaccharides of the pneumococcal serotypes isolated from the patients. When available, two or three consecutive serum samples were analyzed, as initial, acute-phase, and convalescent-phase samples. Furthermore, we calculated the maximum increase in antibody titer in the consecutive sera for individual patients (Table 3). We observed a significant rise in antibodies as well as in high-avidity antibodies, with an average 2.5-fold increase (Fig. 1D). The mean avidity, which was 70%, did not change significantly.
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TABLE 3. Serotype-specific IgG concentrations, in initial and convalescent-phase sera and the maximum increase in serotype-specific IgG for 15 COPD patients with positive sputum cultures for S. pneumoniae during exacerbation
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Subsequently, we calculated the theoretical coverage of the 7-valent, 11-valent, and 23-valent pneumococcal vaccines. The most prevalent serogroups among the 115 isolates investigated were serogroups 3, 9, 11, 14, 19, and 23 (10, 9, 8, 9, 14, and 16%, respectively). Because most of these serogroups are included in the conjugate vaccine, the theoretical coverage for these vaccines is 34 to 49% of all pneumococci, but is even higher (60 to 73%) when cross-reactive serotypes are considered. An analysis of just exacerbation cultures showed comparable coverage rates. This is in agreement with the data of Flamaing et al., who investigated the serotype distribution among pneumococcal isolates obtained from individuals 65 years of age and older with invasive disease in Belgium (6). The potential coverage of the 23-valent conjugate vaccine is even higher, with 70 to 88% coverage. Unfortunately, most previous studies could not find a protective effect of this vaccine against mucosal diseases.
Secondly, we investigated whether natural antibodies were already present in COPD patients but failed to protect these patients from pneumococcal colonization. GMCs for the 92 COPD patients investigated were normal to high when compared to healthy adults (M. Sluijter, unpublished observations). Moreover, as in healthy adults, GMCs for serotypes 4 and 14 were relatively low compared to the other serotypes. Finally, the quality of the antibodies, as measured by means of AIs, was sufficient. Therefore, we conclude that these patients are able to elicit an immunological response to pneumococcal challenge and thus are not immunologically deficient with respect to antibody development. The trend towards higher titers compared to healthy unvaccinated adults may represent the increased pneumococcal contacts in this patient group, although a difference in gender (50 and 98% male, respectively) and smoking history (0 and
100%, respectively) between the healthy adults and the patient group may also be of influence (16).
Healthy adults vaccinated once with the 7-valent conjugate vaccine displayed higher GMCs than the patient group, although they were only significant for serotypes 4, 14, 18C, and 23F due to the relatively large CIs. Because a similar response from our patient group can be expected upon vaccination, we suggest that vaccination of our patient group may increase antibody levels and hence may elicit a higher level of protection against pneumococcal disease. This is in agreement with the results of Jonsson et al., who have shown that vaccination of COPD patients with a serotype 6B conjugate vaccine or a 23-valent polysaccharide vaccine elicits antibody levels comparable to those in vaccinated healthy adults (8). One might question, however, whether the present levels of antibodies prevent both colonization and infection with pneumococci in our patients. It has been hypothesized that the prevention of mucosal disease requires higher levels of anti-pneumococcal antibodies than the prevention of invasive disease. Previous work has shown that higher antibody levels are necessary to protect children against acute otitis media than against invasive diseases (13). Alternatively, one might suggest that anatomical damage to the lungs and the thick mucous layers prevents the immune system from recognizing or attacking colonizing bacteria. This is supported by the data of Davis et al., who have shown that vaccination of COPD patients with a 14-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine induces significant antibody responses but not protection against pneumonia and death (4). In contrast to our findings, most pneumococci observed during infection in that study were nonvaccine serotypes, which may explain the observed vaccine failure. We determined whether the presence of pneumococci during exacerbation elicits a natural immune response to the homologous serotype. Overall, a 2.5-fold increase in IgG antibody levels and high-avidity antibody levels was found. Although a small patient group was studied and a small number of consecutive sera per patient were available, these data suggest that the immune systems of two-thirds of the COPD patients were capable of mounting an antibody response towards pneumococci, whereas one-third of the patients did not show an increase in antibodies upon the presence of pneumococci. Obviously, one could argue whether these antibodies protect COPD patients against pneumococcal reinfection. Follow-up studies are necessary in which the protective potentials of these antibodies are investigated in order to speculate about the effect of pneumococcal conjugate vaccination in COPD patients.
In conclusion, our data indicate that pneumococcal colonization in COPD patients is frequently caused by vaccine serotype strains. Moreover, pneumococcal colonization is a risk factor for exacerbations in these patients. Finally, our findings show that the majority of COPD patients mount an anticapsular immune response during pneumococcal colonization and infection. Clinical studies are needed to investigate the protective potentials of conjugate vaccination for COPD patients.
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