Σφακιανάκης Αλέξανδρος
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Σάββατο 3 Φεβρουαρίου 2018

Waning of measles maternal antibody in infants in measles elimination settings – A systematic literature review

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Publication date: Available online 2 February 2018
Source:Vaccine
Author(s): Fiona M. Guerra, Natasha S. Crowcroft, Lindsay Friedman, Shelley L. Deeks, Scott A. Halperin, Alberto Severini, Todd F. Hatchette, Shelly Bolotin
IntroductionMost infants are born with immunity to measles through maternal antibodies transferred in pregnancy, which decay over time. However, in measles elimination settings, where measles does not circulate endemically and most immunity is from immunization rather than infection, maternal antibody levels are lower. This results in infant immunity that wanes earlier, and a wider susceptibility gap between maternal antibody decay and infant immunization than in non-eliminated settings. We aimed to systematically quantify the extent and duration of protection from measles in infants in settings that have sustained measles elimination.MethodsWe conducted a systematic review of studies of measles maternal antibody waning in infants in measles elimination settings. We searched MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, Scopus, BIOSIS Previews, and Global Health databases for relevant studies. Studies were included if they were set in countries that had eliminated measles for ≥3 years, and if the study cohort included healthy, full-term, unvaccinated infants ≤12 months, born to healthy mothers, and reported a relevant measure of measles maternal antibody in infants. We assessed study quality using the MetaQAT tool.ResultsWe identified 4692 unique citations, eight of which met inclusion criteria. One study reported anti-measles antibody in cord blood, six reported antibody in infant sera, and one reported both. Two studies reported that 80 and 100% of infants were protected from measles at birth. One study reported no protection amongst 3–7 month old infants, and another reported limited protection in infants >4 months. The remaining studies reported the proportion of infants with detected antibody, but not the proportion immune.ConclusionAlthough limited, these data suggest that in settings that have sustained measles elimination, some infants are susceptible to measles well before the age of routine measles immunization. Setting-specific seroprevalence and vaccine effectiveness studies are required to evaluate this in different jurisdictions.



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