Published on: August 12, 2025
LANDMARK STUDY ON DENGUE IMMUNITY
LANDMARK STUDY ON DENGUE IMMUNITY
NEWS – A recent study published in Science Translational Medicine has provided crucial insights into the immune mechanisms that protect against dengue fever
HIGHLIGHTS
Background & Challenge
- Dengue, caused by four serotypes (DENV1–4), is the most common vector-borne viral disease, threatening half the world’s population.
- First infection often increases the risk of severe disease upon reinfection with a different serotype — a phenomenon known as antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE).
- Existing vaccines (Dengvaxia, QDENGA) work best for those with prior exposure; dengue-naïve individuals face ADE risk.
The Study
- Investigated immune markers in 2,996 children (aged 9–14) in Cebu, Philippines, during a major dengue outbreak (2017–2022).
- Cohort: 1,782 vaccinated, rest unvaccinated.
- Aim: Identify immune components linked to broad, cross-serotype protection.
Key Finding — EDE-like Antibodies
- Envelope Dimer Epitope (EDE)-like antibodies emerged as strong markers of “secondary immunity” (after ≥2 infections).
- Prevalence: 81.8%–90.1% in secondary immunity vs. only 4%–12% in primary immunity cases.
- Strong correlation with neutralisation of all four serotypes.
Protective Role
- Both vaccination and natural infection boosted EDE-like, binding, and neutralising antibodies.
- Higher EDE-like antibody levels linked to lower risk of:
- Symptomatic dengue
- Dengue with warning signs
- Hospitalisation
- More protective against disease severity than infection itself.
Mechanistic Insight
- EDE-like antibodies explained:
- 42%–65% of protection from mature virus-neutralising antibodies
- 41%–75% from general E protein-binding antibodies
- Indicates EDE-like antibodies are the primary driver of broad protection.
Implications & Future
- Potential to use EDE-like antibodies as markers for vaccine efficacy trials.
- May guide design of universal dengue vaccines targeting robust EDE antibody responses.
- Limitations: Limited case numbers for all serotypes; restricted monoclonal antibody panel.
