Abstract

The rates of secondary immune response (SIR) and secondary vaccine failure (SVF) during a measles epidemic (10,184 notifications) were evaluated. A patient with SIR was defined as a subject for whom all sera were immunoglobulin G (IgG) positive and IgM negative with a significant increase in complement fixation titer. A patient with SVF was defined as a vaccinated symptomatic subject showing a SIR. Sequential sera from 898 subjects were tested for measles antibody by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (IgG and IgM) and by complement fixation. Evidence of recent anti-measles virus specific immune response was found in 496 subjects (55.5%). The vaccination rate was estimated at 74.6% (99% confidence interval [CI], 67.9 to 80.7%). The number of exposed vaccinated subjects was estimated at 370 (74.6% of 496). The SIR rate was 4.03% (20 of 496) (99% CI, 2.1 to 6.9%) among subjects with immune response. These 20 subjects were 2 with measles (Centers for Disease Control's definition), 6 with measles with rash of unknown duration, 8 with presumed measles with either rash or fever, 3 asymptomatic subjects (2 with recent contact with a measles case), and 1 undocumented subject. Since 3 patients with SIR were asymptomatic and 2 others were documented as not vaccinated, there was a maximum of 15 probable occurrences of SVF among the 20 patients with SIR. The SVF rate among exposed vaccinated subjects was estimated at 4.05% (15 of 370) (99% CI, 1.9 to 7.5%). In conclusion, neither prior vaccination nor detectable SIR ensures protective immunity. Measles virus may induce asymptomatic SIR in IgG-seropositive subjects. SVF led to typical or modified measles but did not seem to have played an important role during this epidemic.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call