Author:
PAUNIO M.,HEDMAN K.,DAVIDKIN I.,VALLE M.,HEINONEN O. P.,LEINIKKI P.,SALMI A.,PELTOLA H.
Abstract
Failure to seroconvert (primary vaccine failure) is believed to be the principal reason (approx.
> 95%) why some vaccinees remain susceptible to measles and is often attributed to the
persistence of maternal antibodies in children vaccinated at a young age. Avidity testing is able
to separate primary from secondary vaccine failures (waning and/or incomplete immunity), but
has not been utilized in measles epidemiology. Low-avidity (LA) and high-avidity (HA) virus-specific IgG antibodies indicate primary and secondary failure, respectively. Measles vaccine
failures (n = 142; mean age 10·1 years, range 2–22 years) from an outbreak in 1988–9 in
Finland were tested for measles–virus IgG avidity using a protein denaturating EIA. Severity
of measles was recorded in 89 failures and 169 non-vaccinees (mean age 16·2 years, range 2–22
years). The patients with HA antibodies (n = 28) tended to have clinically mild measles and
rapid IgG response. Among failures vaccinated at < 12, 12–15 and > 15 months of age with
single doses of Schwarz-strain vaccine in the 1970s, 50 (95% CI 1–99), 36 (CI 16–56) and 25%
(CI 8–42) had HA antibodies, respectively. When a single measles, mumps and rubella (MMR)
vaccine had been given after 1982 at 15 months of age, only 7% (CI 0–14) showed HA
antibodies. Omitting re-vaccinees and those vaccinated at < 15 months, Schwarz-strain
recipients had 3·6 (CI 1·1–11·5) higher occurrence of HA responses compared to MMR
recipients. Apart from one municipality, where even re-vaccinees had high risk of primary
infection, 89% (CI 69 to ∼ 100) of the infected re-vaccinees had an HA response. Secondary
measles-vaccine failures are more common than was more previously thought, particularly
among individuals vaccinated in early life, long ago, and among re-vaccinees. Waning
immunity – even among individuals vaccinated after 15 months of age, without the boosting
effect of natural infections should be considered a relevant possibility in future planning of
vaccination against measles.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology