These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: Measles vaccine immunogenicity in 6- versus 15-month-old infants born to mothers in the measles vaccine era. Author: Johnson CE, Nalin DR, Chui LW, Whitwell J, Marusyk RG, Kumar ML. Journal: Pediatrics; 1994 Jun; 93(6 Pt 1):939-44. PubMed ID: 8190581. Abstract: HYPOTHESIS: The low titer of measles antibody in infants of mothers with vaccine-induced immunity may allow immunization against measles before 15 months of age. METHODS: Six- and 15-month-old infants born to mothers < or = 30 years of age with no history of measles were recruited. Infants enrolled at 6 months of age were immunized with monovalent measles vaccine (Attenuvax), and maternal serum and infant pre- and postvaccination sera were obtained. Those enrolled for primary vaccination at 15 months of age received either Attenuvax (N = 12) or M-M-RII (N = 3). Six-month-old infants were revaccinated with M-M-RII at 15 months of age; pre- and postrevaccination sera were again obtained. Three antibody assays were used: a measles neutralizing assay (NT) and two enzyme immunoassays (EIA) for measles IgG and measles IgM. RESULTS: Among primary vaccinees, 14 of 19 infants aged 6 months (74%) developed NT antibody, as did 15 of 15 infants aged 15 months (100%). The reciprocal geometric mean titer of 6-month-old seroresponders was 23.3, significantly lower than that of the 15-month-old primary vaccinees (87.7, P < .001). Primary seroconversion rates by EIA were 53% for 6-month-old infants and 100% for those aged 15 months. Revaccination of infants who had received Attenuvax at 6 months of age resulted in 100% NT positivity; the geometric mean titer rose to equal that of the group given primary immunization at 15 months of age. Measles IgM antibody was detected in 10 of 14 infants tested 1 month after primary vaccination at 15 months, but was not detected in any of the revaccinated infants after the second dose at 15 months of age (P < .001). CONCLUSIONS: 1) Immunization with measles vaccine in infants born to vaccine-immune mothers at 6 months of age induced NT antibody in 74% of infants. 2) Revaccination of prior 6-month-old vaccinees at 15 months resulted in antibody titers equivalent to 15-month-old vaccinees. 3) Lack of an IgM response following revaccination suggests that even seronegative infants may be primed to respond on re-exposure to measles.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]