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Abstract
Nineteen children with Hodgkin's disease were immuized with dodecavalent pneumococcal vaccine; the efficacy of vaccination, the duration of response, and the significance of the time of immunization in relation to splenectomy and subsequent irradiation and chemotherapy were investigated. Eight children were immunized before splenectomy, and 11 were immunized after splenectomy, irradiation, and chemotherapy. All children were irradiated, and all but two received chemotherapy with MOPP (nitrogen mustard, vincristine sulfate, procarbazine, and prednisone). Sera were assayed for antibodies to the 12 polysaccharide types in the vaccine. The group of children immunized before splenectomy had a significant antibody response to 67% of the antigens tested, whereas the group immunized after splenectomy responded to 40% of the antigens (P less than 0.0001). The duration of response was variable. Pneumococcal vaccine was more likely to provoke an immunologic response if administered before splenectomy than if administered after splenectomy, irradiation, and chemotherapy; however, the response was not uniform. A response to one antigen did not necessarily imply a response to other antigens. In the absence of a readily available assay to determine a protective antibody response, one cannot rely on the vaccine as the sole means of preventing pneumococcal infections in asplenic children with Hodgkin's disease.
View details for Web of Science ID A1981MA01000014
View details for PubMedID 6895119