Again, vaccines save kids lives
edited by Stephanie Baum, reviewed
by Robert Egan
The research appears in The Lancet Microbe.
"The fact that these antibodies reach the nasal mucosa
has not been demonstrated before and highlights how effective this vaccination
is," say the researchers.
Since 2019, pregnant women in the Netherlands have been
offered a vaccination against whooping cough (pertussis) for their unborn
child, known as the 22-week shot.
"We give this vaccine to protect babies from whooping
cough right after birth. In the first weeks of life, babies are extremely
vulnerable and too young to be vaccinated themselves. That's why we vaccinate
the mother during pregnancy," explains immunologist Dimitri Diavatopoulos
of Radboudumc.
Importance of vaccination
Whooping cough is well controlled in Europe, but remains a
deadly disease in many parts of the world. Each year, between 200,000 and
300,000 people die from it, mostly young infants in low-
and middle-income countries, where good vaccines are not always available.
In the study conducted by Radboudumc and the Medical
Research Council Unit The Gambia, 343 mothers and their babies participated,
with half of the pregnant women receiving the whooping cough vaccine.
"Mothers who were vaccinated during pregnancy passed on
antibodies through the placenta that were subsequently detected in the baby's
nasal mucosa," says Diavatopoulos.
Immune response differs by vaccine type
The study also shows that babies who received a whole-cell
whooping cough vaccine at 8, 12, and 16 weeks developed, on average, a
stronger immune response than those who received an acellular vaccine.
"The difference is that a whole-cell vaccine contains
the complete, but inactivated, whooping cough bacterium, whereas an acellular
vaccine contains only a few purified components of the bacterium,"
Diavatopoulos explains.
"Acellular vaccines usually cause fewer side effects
but often also provide shorter-lasting protection. Our findings suggest that
whole-cell vaccines may support longer-term immune protection," says
Janeri Fröberg, postdoctoral researcher at Radboudumc.
In Europe, the acellular vaccine has been used since 2005,
while most low- and middle-income countries still use the whole-cell vaccine.
The researchers emphasize that further studies are needed to determine what
these results mean for clinical protection and vaccination policies in
different settings.
WHO: Keep the whole-cell vaccine
For the Netherlands, this study underscores the importance
of the 22-week shot, which gives babies immediate protection during their most
vulnerable period. For lower-income countries, where most deaths occur, the
results show that implementing a whooping cough vaccination during pregnancy
could save lives.
For countries that continue to use whole-cell vaccines, the
findings support the World Health Organization (WHO) recommendation to maintain
their use, as they may provide longer-lasting immunity.
More information
Mucosal immune responses to Bordetella pertussis in Gambian
infants following maternal and primary vaccination: an immunological sub-study
of a double-blinded, randomized, controlled, phase 4 trial, The Lancet
Microbe (2026). DOI:
10.1219/24tlmicrobe0660
Journal information: The Lancet Microbe
