Expanding the role of bacterial vaccines into life-course vaccination strategies and prevention of antimicrobial-resistant infections.
Jan T PoolmanPublished in: NPJ vaccines (2020)
A crisis in bacterial infections looms as ageing populations, increasing rates of bacteraemia and healthcare-associated infections converge with increasing antimicrobial resistance and a paucity of new antimicrobial classes. New initiatives are needed to develop bacterial vaccines for older adults in whom immune senescence plays a critical role. Novel vaccines require an expanded repertoire to prevent mucosal diseases such as pneumonia, skin and soft tissue infections and urinary tract infections that are major causes of morbidity and mortality in the elderly, and key drivers of antimicrobial resistance. This review considers the challenges inherent to the prevention of bacterial diseases, particularly mucosal infections caused by major priority bacterial pathogens against which current vaccines are sub-optimal. It has become clear that prevention of many lung, urinary tract and skin infections requires more than circulating antibodies. Induction of Th1/Th17 cellular responses with tissue-resident memory (Trm) cells homing to mucosal tissues may be a pre-requisite for success.
Keyphrases
- antimicrobial resistance
- soft tissue
- healthcare
- staphylococcus aureus
- urinary tract infection
- public health
- gene expression
- patient safety
- induced apoptosis
- quality improvement
- oxidative stress
- endothelial cells
- intensive care unit
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- respiratory failure
- pi k akt
- affordable care act