Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0043167 (pertussis)
19,595 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In experimental animals, immune responses to certain antigens are regulated by immunoglobulin allotype-linked genes. In an effort to detect such genes in humans, we examined the antibody responses of 74 healthy children with different Km(1) or Gm(23) allotypes to a Haemophilus influenzae type b vaccine (type b polysaccharide capsule-pertussis vaccine). The anticapsular antibody responses of black or white children with the Km(1) allotype were 4.6- to 9.5-fold higher than those of children who lacked this determinant (P less than 0.004). No significant differences were found in antibody response with respect to the Gm(23) allotype. The frequencies of Km(1) and Gm(23) also were examined in 170 patients with Haemophilus meningitis, 71 patients with epiglottitis, and 173 control children. Km(1) was detected less frequently in black patients with meningitis (38%) than in those with epiglottitis (81%, P less than 0.002) or in controls (66%, P less than 0.0007). The relative risk of meningitis thus was 3.2-fold lower among black children with the Km(1) allotype than in those who lacked this allotype (odds ratio = 0.3, 95% confidence interval 0.2 to 0.6). However, the risk of meningitis was not decreased in white children with the Km(1) allotype (odds ratio = 1.0). There were no significant differences in the frequency of Gm(23) among the patient groups and controls. The Km(1) allotype but not the Gm(23) thus defines a subpopulation of children of both races who are high responders to this vaccine, and black children but not white children with the Km(1) allotype are at decreased risk of developing Haemophilus meningitis. These data indicate that in blacks, genes associated with Km(1) may affect immune response to a prototype type b Haemophilus vaccine, and perhaps interact with another factor related to race to affect susceptibility to Haemophilus meningitis.
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PMID:Response to immunization with Haemophilus influenzae type b polysaccharide-pertussis vaccine and risk of Haemophilus meningitis in children with the Km(1) immunoglobulin allotype. 633 1

Siblings of patients with type b Haemophilus influenzae meningitis are at increased risk of developing Haemophilus disease. We immunized 26 healthy siblings and 25 control subjects using a vaccine containing the type b polysaccharide capsule (10 micrograms PRP) and pertussis vaccine (4 opacity units) (Lederle Laboratories) to determine whether siblings of patients with Haemophilus meningitis had an impaired antibody response to PRP. Using two intramuscular injections one month apart, we found that the siblings had a lower response to PRP. One month after the second injection, 12 of 24 of the siblings had serum concentrations of anticapsular (PRP) antibody thought to be sufficient to confer protection against Haemophilus disease (greater than or equal to 300 ng/ml), compared with 19 of 24 of the control children tested (50% vs 79%, P = 0.035 by chi-square analysis). In comparison with the normal controls, the siblings produced significantly less IgG anti-PRP antibody but similar amounts of IgM. The impaired responsiveness to PRP was most evident among the 16 children born after their sibling had meningitis and who were not known to have been exposed to type b Haemophilus infection previously. These data indicate that siblings of some patients with type b Haemophilus meningitis have reduced ability to form IgG anti-PRP antibody, which may be associated with increased susceptibility to Haemophilus disease.
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PMID:Siblings of patients with Haemophilus meningitis have impaired anticapsular antibody responses to Haemophilus vaccine. 660 4