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Measles Virus Neutralizing Antibody Response and Durability Two Years after One or Two Doses of Measles-Mumps-Rubella Vaccine among Young Seronegative Healthcare Workers. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • There is limited research on how long the immune response from MMR vaccine booster doses lasts compared to natural measles infection, particularly in young adults.
  • The study involved seronegative healthcare workers who received the MMR vaccine and those with confirmed measles during a 2019 outbreak, analyzing their antibody levels two years later.
  • Results indicated that those who had natural measles infection showed significantly higher antibody levels than those vaccinated, implying a need for monitoring immune responses in healthcare workers during measles outbreaks.

Article Abstract

Although there have been several studies regarding the immunogenicity of one or two booster doses of the measles−mumps−rubella (MMR) vaccine in measles-seronegative young adults, limited data are available about how long the immune response is sustained compared with natural infection. This study included seronegative healthcare workers (HCWs) (aged 21−38 years) who received one or two doses of the measles−mumps−rubella (MMR) vaccine and HCWs with laboratory-confirmed measles infection during an outbreak in 2019. We compared neutralizing antibody titers measured using the plaque reduction neutralization (PRN) test and measles-specific immunoglobulin G (IgG) using chemiluminescent immunoassays 2 years after vaccination or infection. Among 107 HCWs with seronegative measles IgGs, the overall seroconversion rate of measles IgGs remained 82.2% (88/107), and 45.8% (49/107) of the participants had a medium (121−900) or high (>900) PRN titer after 2 years from one or two booster doses. The measles-neutralizing antibody titers of both PRN titer (ND50) and geometric mean concentration 2 years after natural infection were significantly higher than those of one or two booster doses of the MMR vaccine (p < 0.001 and p < 0.001, respectively). Our results suggest that serologic screening followed by appropriate postexposure prophylaxis can be beneficial for young HCWs without a history of natural infection especially in a measles outbreak setting, because of possible susceptibility to measles despite booster MMR vaccination 2 years ago. Long-term data about sustainable humoral immunity after one or two booster vaccination are needed based on the exact vaccination history.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9698570PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines10111812DOI Listing

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