Author:
Krumova Stefka,Andonova Ivona,Stoitsova Savina,Stefanova Radostina,Vladimirova Nadejda,Parmakova Kremena,Kurchatova Anna
Abstract
Background: Healthcare workers are at greater risk of acquiring measles than the general population. Transmission occurs from infected patients to staff and from infected staff to patients and colleagues. In inpatient and outpatient settings, susceptible patients suffering from other conditions, especially the elderly and severely ill patients in intensive care units are at a high risk of severe disease or death if infected with measles. The most effective preventive measure against measles is vaccination with two doses of a measles-containing vaccine.
Aim: To perform a serological assessment of the presence of measles IgG antibodies among healthcare workers.
Materials and Methods: The present study involves serological testing performed on samples from persons working in hospitals and Regional Health Inspectorates in the country. Screening started in connection with a reported measles outbreak in Bulgaria in 2019, and continued into early 2020. An indirect ELISA assay for the detection of specific measles IgG antibodies in serum samples was used.
Results: The tested 152 healthcare workers were from 5 regions of the country, i.e. Sofia-capital (n=87), Burgas (n=6), Blagoevgrad (n=5), Dobrich (n=8) and Pazardzhik (n=46). Anti-measles IgG antibodies were detected in 85.5% of the participants (130/152). Negative results, indicating a possible lack of protective immunity against measles, were obtained primarily in samples from persons younger than 40 years of age.
Conclusion: Screening to identify healthcare workers who lack presumptive evidence of protective immunity against measles should be reinforced, especially among younger healthcare workers, in order to minimize the risk of measles both among healthcare workers and among patients.
Publisher
National Center of Infectious and Parasitic Diseases
Reference22 articles.
1. Urbiztondo L, Borràs E, Costa J, Broner S, Campins M, et al. Prevalence of measles antibodies among health care workers in Catalonia (Spain) in the elimination era, BMC Infect Dis. 2013, 13: 391. doi: 10.1186/1471-2334-13-391
2. Domínguez A, Torner N, Barrabeig I, Rovira A, Rius C, et al. Large measles outbreak in a community with high vaccination coverage. Clin Infect Dis. 2008, 47: 1143-1149. 10.1086/592258.
3. Borràs E, Urbiztondo L, Costa J, Batalla J, Torner N, Plasencia A, et al. Measles antibodies and response to vaccination in children aged less than 14 months: implications for age of vaccination. Epidemiol Infect. 2012, 140 (9): 1599-1606. 10.1017/S0950268811002184.
4. Gatcheva N, Mihneva Z, Mehandjieva V, Petkova V. Elimination of measles in Bulgaria: the fever-rash illness surveillance revealed no indigenous transmission following the importations in 2005 and 2006. Probl Infect Parasit Dis., 2007, 35(2):30-33.
5. Kurchatova A, Krumova St, Vladimirova N, Nikolaeva-Glomb L, Stoyanova A, Kantardjiev T, Gatcheva N. Preliminary findings indicate nosocomial transmission and Roma population as most affected group in ongoing measles B3 genotype outbreak in Bulgaria, March to August 2017. Euro Surveill., 2017, 22(36):pii=30611.
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献