Professor Nigel Temperton

Chair in Molecular Virology


Curriculum vitae



01634 202957


Medway School of Pharmacy

University of Kent

Medway School of Pharmacy,
Anson Building,
Central Avenue,
Chatham Maritime,
Kent, ME4 4TB
United Kingdom



Correlation of Influenza B Haemagglutination Inhibiton, Single-Radial Haemolysis and Pseudotype-Based Microneutralisation Assays for Immunogenicity Testing of Seasonal Vaccines


Journal article


G. Carnell, C. Trombetta, F. Ferrara, E. Montomoli, N. Temperton
Vaccines, 2021

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMedCentral PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Carnell, G., Trombetta, C., Ferrara, F., Montomoli, E., & Temperton, N. (2021). Correlation of Influenza B Haemagglutination Inhibiton, Single-Radial Haemolysis and Pseudotype-Based Microneutralisation Assays for Immunogenicity Testing of Seasonal Vaccines. Vaccines.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Carnell, G., C. Trombetta, F. Ferrara, E. Montomoli, and N. Temperton. “Correlation of Influenza B Haemagglutination Inhibiton, Single-Radial Haemolysis and Pseudotype-Based Microneutralisation Assays for Immunogenicity Testing of Seasonal Vaccines.” Vaccines (2021).


MLA   Click to copy
Carnell, G., et al. “Correlation of Influenza B Haemagglutination Inhibiton, Single-Radial Haemolysis and Pseudotype-Based Microneutralisation Assays for Immunogenicity Testing of Seasonal Vaccines.” Vaccines, 2021.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{g2021a,
  title = {Correlation of Influenza B Haemagglutination Inhibiton, Single-Radial Haemolysis and Pseudotype-Based Microneutralisation Assays for Immunogenicity Testing of Seasonal Vaccines},
  year = {2021},
  journal = {Vaccines},
  author = {Carnell, G. and Trombetta, C. and Ferrara, F. and Montomoli, E. and Temperton, N.}
}

Abstract

Influenza B is responsible for a significant proportion of the global morbidity, mortality and economic loss caused by influenza-related disease. Two antigenically distinct lineages co-circulate worldwide, often resulting in mismatches in vaccine coverage when vaccine predictions fail. There are currently operational issues with gold standard serological assays for influenza B, such as lack of sensitivity and requirement for specific antigen treatment. This study encompasses the gold standard assays with the more recent Pseudotype-based Microneutralisation assay in order to study comparative serological outcomes. Haemagglutination Inhibition, Single Radial Haemolysis and Pseudotype-based Microneutralisation correlated strongly for strains in the Yamagata lineage; however, it correlated with neither gold standard assays for the Victoria lineage.



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