The total influenza vaccine failure of 1947 revisited: major intrasubtypic antigenic change can explain failure of vaccine in a post-World War II epidemic

ED Kilbourne, C Smith, I Brett… - Proceedings of the …, 2002 - National Acad Sciences
ED Kilbourne, C Smith, I Brett, BA Pokorny, B Johansson, N Cox
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2002National Acad Sciences
Although vaccine-induced immunity to influenza A virus is continually challenged by
progressively selected mutations in the virus's major antigens (antigenic drift), virus strains
within a subtype (eg, H1N1) are antigenically cross-reactive. Although cross-immunity
diminishes as further mutations accumulate, necessitating frequent changes in vaccine
strains, older vaccines are usually partially protective. The post-World War II epidemic of
1947 is notable for the total failure of a vaccine previously effective in the 1943–44 and 1944 …
Although vaccine-induced immunity to influenza A virus is continually challenged by progressively selected mutations in the virus's major antigens (antigenic drift), virus strains within a subtype (e.g., H1N1) are antigenically cross-reactive. Although cross-immunity diminishes as further mutations accumulate, necessitating frequent changes in vaccine strains, older vaccines are usually partially protective. The post-World War II epidemic of 1947 is notable for the total failure of a vaccine previously effective in the 1943–44 and 1944–45 seasons. We have combined extensive antigenic characterization of the hemagglutinin and neuraminidase antigens of the 1943 and 1947 viruses with analysis of their nucleotide and amino acid sequences and have found marked antigenic and amino acid differences in viruses of the two years. Furthermore, in a mouse model, vaccination with the 1943 vaccine had no effect on infection with the 1947 strain. These findings are important, because complete lack of cross-immunogenicity has been found previously only with antigenic shift, in which antigenically novel antigens have been captured by reassortment of human and animal strains, sometimes leading to pandemics. Although the 1947 epidemic lacked the usual hallmarks of pandemic disease, including an extensive increase in mortality, it warns of the possibility that extreme intrasubtypic antigenic variation (if coupled with an increase in disease severity) could produce pandemic disease without the introduction of animal virus antigens.
National Acad Sciences