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mRNA flu vaccine offers wider protection

A new study led by researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis has found that an investigational mRNA influenza vaccine helps the immune system recognise a wider range of influenza viruses than the standard flu vaccine, offering stronger and potentially longer-lasting protection.

Influenza vaccinations are less effective when the vaccine strains don’t closely match the viruses circulating in the community. A broader immune response could translate to a more effective vaccine even when the virus is changing faster than vaccine makers can update their shots.

The mFlusiva vaccine, developed by Moderna, was recently recommended for adults aged 50 and over by the US FDA's vaccine advisory committee.

“We are seeing that the mRNA flu vaccine doesn’t just boost the immune system’s response to what it has already seen, it can help expand and diversify the antibody response, covering a broader range of flu strains,” said Ali Ellebedy PhD, the Leo Loeb Professor in the WashU Medicine Department of Pathology and Immunology, and the study’s senior author. “If we can make flu immunity broader and more durable, that could mean fewer hospitalisations and deaths, which translates into a major impact on public health.” The findings were published 15 June in Nature Immunology.

In addition to producing the broader immune response identified in this new study, the mRNA technology that helped change the course of the COVID-19 pandemic could allow vaccine manufacturers to quickly update and produce new vaccines, potentially enabling a faster response to emerging viral strains.

In a separate phase 3 clinical trial, Moderna found that its mRNA-based flu vaccine reduced the risk of illness by 26.6% more than the standard flu vaccine in older adults. Seeking to understand possible causes of this improved protection, the new study examined how immune responses to the mRNA-based flu vaccine differ from those of the standard vaccine.

The researchers, including co-corresponding author Jiwon Lee PhD, an Associate Professor in the Department of Convergence Medicine at Korea University College of Medicine and an adjunct professor at Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth, followed 75 adults ages 20 to 50 over either the 2022-2023 flu season or the 2023-2024 flu season. About half received the investigational mRNA vaccine, known as mRNA-1010, which delivers genetic instructions that prompt the body to make proteins from four strains of influenza that trigger immune responses against intruding viruses. The other half got Fluarix, an approved flu shot containing inactivated pieces of four influenza viruses grown in eggs. Both vaccine platforms targeted the same strains recommended by the World Health Organization for the two flu seasons.

Analysing blood samples, the researchers found a stronger immune response in participants who received the mRNA vaccine compared with participants who received the standard flu shot. Specifically, those given the mRNA vaccine produced more flu-specific antibodies and more flu-specific memory B cells, immune cells that remember past infections and can quickly generate antibodies against pathogens such as viruses.

To investigate the vaccine’s ability to diversify B cells, the researchers studied in a subset of participants their germinal centres, where B cells improve their ability to recognise the virus and generate slightly different versions of themselves. These B cells produce antibodies that target different parts of the virus, creating a diverse pool that is more likely to recognise and fight new variants.

Among 13 people receiving the mRNA flu vaccine, five developed flu-specific germinal centre responses in the lymph nodes that persisted for the 26 weeks of the study. In contrast, persistent immune responses were not seen in the 15 participants who received the traditional flu shot.

In addition, from four weeks after vaccination until the six-month mark, when the study ended, antibodies from mRNA vaccine recipients recognised and bound to many diverse flu strains across many decades of viral evolution, especially those known to cause the most widespread illness. Antibodies from standard vaccine recipients bound to fewer divergent virus strains. When antibodies bind to viruses, they block them from infecting cells while also tagging them for destruction by immune cells.

  • Matz HC, Yu TG, Dixit K, et al. mRNA-based influenza vaccine expands the B cell response breadth in humans. Nat Immunol. Published online June 15, 2026. doi:10.1038/s41590-026-02569-5.

 

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