Melioidosis, caused by Burkholderia pseudomallei, is a potentially lethal infection with no licensed vaccine. There is little understanding of why some exposed individuals have no symptoms, while others rapidly progress to sepsis and death, or why diabetes confers increased susceptibility. We prospectively recruited a cohort of 183 acute melioidosis patients and 21 control subjects from Northeast Thailand and studied immune parameters in the context of survival status and the presence or absence of diabetes. HLA-B*46 (one of the commonest HLA class I alleles in SE Asia) and HLA-C*01 were associated with an increased risk of death (odds ratio 2.8 and 3.1 respectively). Transcriptomic analysis during acute infection in diabetics indicated the importance of interplay between immune pathways including those involved in antigen presentation, chemotaxis, innate and adaptive immunity and their regulation. Survival was associated with enhanced T cell immunity to nine of fifteen immunodominant antigens analysed including AhpC (BPSL2096), BopE (BPSS1525), PilO (BPSS1599), ATP binding protein (BPSS1385) and an uncharacterised protein (BPSL2520). T cell immunity to GroEL (BPSL2697) was specifically impaired in diabetic individuals. This characterization of immunity associated with survival during acute infection offers insights into correlates of protection and a foundation for design of an effective multivalent vaccine.
Context:Detailed reports of red cell alloantibody frequencies and specificities in the Thai population are limited. The aims of this study were to determine the specificity and compare the frequency of alloantibodies detected using column agglutination technology (CAT) and conventional tube techniques in blood donors and previously transfused patients.Settings and Design:We retrospectively reviewed antibody screening and identification records for two time periods: January-December 2006 during which conventional tube techniques were used and January 2008-December 2009 when CAT was used.Results:The overall prevalence of alloantibodies in both patients and donors when using conventional tube techniques was 0.7%, for patients only was 0.9% and donors 0.6%. The most frequent antibodies detected in both groups were anti-Lea, anti-Mia, anti-Leb, anti-P1 and anti-E. When using CAT, alloantibodies were found in 0.8% of patients and 0.13% of donors with the five most common alloantibodies found in patients were anti-Mia, anti-E, anti-Lea, anti-c and anti-Leb respectively. Similarly the common alloantibody specificities in donors were anti-Lea, anti-Mia, anti-Leb, anti-M and anti-D.Conclusions:One of the most commonly identified alloantibodies in the Thai population studied was anti-Mia suggesting that Mia positive red cells should routinely be included in antibody screening and identification in this population. For antibody screening and identification, CAT method detected immune and warm alloantibody (ies) more frequently than that associated with conventional tube techniques.
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