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HISTORICAL ARTICLE
JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, U.S. GOV'T, P.H.S.
REVIEW
Antibody-dependent enhancement of infection and the pathogenesis of viral disease.
Clinical Infectious Diseases 1994 September
Antibody-dependent enhancement of infection (ADE) is an in vitro serological phenomenon--or a group of phenomena--in which viral infection of susceptible cells is modified by the addition of virus-reactive antibody. Evidence suggests that ADE reflects immunologic processes that occur in vivo. Various severe and even fatal viral conditions of humans and animals, including dengue shock syndrome, the "early-death phenomenon" in experimental infections of immune animals, and other vaccine- and immunoglobulin-modified conditions, have been attributed to ADE by some researchers. ADE has caused great concern in relation to the development of vaccines against dengue virus and human immunodeficiency virus. More data are urgently needed on the mechanisms and determinants of ADE and on its alleged role in disease pathogenesis and in vaccine-associated phenomena.
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