Placental transfer and decay of maternally acquired antimeasles antibodies in Nigerian children
- 1 July 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal
- Vol. 19 (7) , 635-641
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00006454-200007000-00010
Abstract
In developing countries vaccination against measles virus (MV) is generally administered at 9 months of age, although it is well-documented that protection of most infants by passively acquired maternal MV antibodies is waning before immunization is given. The purpose of this study was to investigate the decay of maternally derived MV antibodies in Nigerian infants as well as to compare a German and Nigerian cohort of paired mothers and newborns regarding the placental transfer efficiency of MV-specific IgG and total IgG antibodies. MV-specific IgG antibodies were measured with a commercially available MV-enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, a recombinant hemagglutinin enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay as well as a neutralization assay. Total IgG values were determined with a standard immunoturbidimetric test. Anti-MV IgG titers were twice as high in German newborns as in Nigerian newborns. An increased concentration of immunoglobulins transferred via the placenta was found only in the German cohort. High concentrations of total maternal IgG reduced the concentration of MV-specific as well as total IgG that crossed the placenta. Furthermore only 17% of the 4-month-old Nigerian infants were still protected against measles. Antibodies had a biologic half-life of 33 days and a biochemical half-life of 48 days. Our findings demonstrate that the decay of passively acquired MV antibodies occurred even more rapidly than expected resulting in susceptibility to MV in most of the 4-month-old infants in Nigeria. Furthermore transfer of maternal anti-MV IgG and total IgG antibodies to the newborn was more efficient in the German cohort compared with the Nigerian group. These findings suggest the use of alternative vaccination strategies in developing countries to possibly reduce the window of susceptibility against measles.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Measles vaccination before nine monthsTropical Medicine & International Health, 1998
- Maternal measles antibody decay in rural Bangladeshi infants — implications for vaccination schedulesVaccine, 1998
- Loss of Maternally-acquired Measles Antibody During Infancy in Ilorin, NigeriaJournal of Tropical Pediatrics, 1995
- The 1st International Standard for anti-measles serumBiologicals, 1991
- Measles Antibody: Reevaluation of Protective TitersThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1990
- Measles vaccination in early infancy and persistence of antibodyThe Lancet, 1990
- Loss of Maternal Measles Antibody during Infancy in an African CityInternational Journal of Epidemiology, 1989
- Maternally derived measles immunity in era of vaccine-protected mothersThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1986
- Antibody against viruses in maternal and cord sera: specific antibody is concentrated on the fetal side of the circulationEpidemiology and Infection, 1982
- THE TRANSMISSION OF IMMUNITY FROM MOTHER TO YOUNG AND THE CATABOLISM OF IMMUNOGLOBULINSThe Lancet, 1966