Abstract

A new passive hemagglutination assay for the detection of antibodies to rubella virus hemagglutinin (PHAST-Rubella) was compared with the hemagglutination inhibition (HI) test and another passive hemagglutination test that uses a soluble rubella virus antigen (SA-PHA). When the immune responses of vaccinated individuals were monitored, similar rises in antibody titer were detected by HI or PHAST-Rubella, whereas the rise in titer detected by SA-PHA was delayed. Early-phase vaccine-induced immunoglobulin M antibody analyzed by sucrose gradient fractionation was detected to the same degree by HI and PHAST-Rubella, but early-phase immunoglobulin G antibody reacted more strongly in the HI test. When acute and convalescent serum pairs from rubella-infected individuals were evaluated, a fourfold rise in titer was detected by PHAST-Rubella and HI in 15 of 15 pairs, whereas SA-PHA, which is not intended for detecting antibody titer rises in acute infections, detected a rise in titer in only 3 of 15 pairs. In studies to determine rubella immune status, testing of 1,078 premarital and random serum specimens resulted in 98.6% agreement among the three methods in identifying rubella antibody-positive and -negative individuals. For the quantitative PHAST-Rubella procedure, a coefficient of correlation of 0.93 was obtained, in comparison with HI, when a panel of 40 characterized sera were tested. These results indicate that PHAST-Rubella reagents can detect rubella antibodies as well as HI reagents and thus may be used as a fast and accurate means of determining rubella immune status and for the quantitation of rubella antibodies.

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