| Literature DB >> 12721911 |
Kathryn A Kohler1, Ali Jaffer M Suleiman, Susan E Robertson, Pradeep Malankar, Saleh Al-Khusaiby, Rita F Helfand, David Brown, William J Bellini, Roland W Sutter.
Abstract
A prospective immunogenicity trial of measles and rubella vaccines was conducted in Oman. Children received measles vaccine at age 9 months and measles-rubella vaccine at age 15 months. Serum specimens were tested for measles-specific IgG and rubella-specific IgG. Of 1025 eligible infants, 881 (86.0%) returned for all five visits and had adequate serum samples for testing. Seroconversion to measles after vaccination at 9 months was 98.1%. At 15 months, 47 (5.3%) of the 881 children were seronegative for measles; of these, 44 (93.6%) seroconverted. At 16 months, 99% of the children seronegative at age 9 months seroconverted after receiving two doses of measles vaccine. At age 15 months, 684 (77.6%) children were seronegative for rubella. Of these, 676 (98.8%) seroconverted by age 16 months. One dose of measles vaccine at age 9 months was highly immunogenic. One dose of measles-rubella vaccine at age 15 months closed the remaining measles immunogenicity gap and resulted in a high rate of rubella seroconversion.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 12721911 DOI: 10.1086/368048
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Infect Dis ISSN: 0022-1899 Impact factor: 5.226