• Vaccine · Nov 1995

    Persistence of anti-mumps virus antibodies after a two-dose MMR vaccination. A nine-year follow-up.

    • I Davidkin, M Valle, and I Julkunen.
    • National Public Health Institute, Helsinki, Finland.
    • Vaccine. 1995 Nov 1; 13 (16): 1617-22.

    AbstractA two-dose vaccination program against measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) viruses was started in Finland in 1982. In this program the trivalent MMR-II vaccine (MSD, USA) was offered to children at the ages of 14-18 months and 6 years followed by revaccination 4-5 years later. The vaccination coverage has been high (97%) and MMR infections have practically been eliminated in the Finnish population. In a serological follow-up program sequential serum samples were obtained from 254 children (127 14-18-month-old vaccinees and 127 6-year-old vaccinees) during a 9-year follow-up period. Anti-mumps virus antibody titers were determined by enzyme immunoassay using purified whole mumps viruses as the antigen. In seronegative (n = 120) 14-18-month-old vaccinees the seroconversion rate was 86% (geometric mean titer 1/1670 +/- 1/270). The antibody levels fell rapidly (significance p < 0.01) within the first year of follow-up (mean titer 1/1080 +/- 1/190), but remained relatively stable in subsequent years. After revaccination the seropositivity rate was 95% (mean titer 1/2310 +/- 1/260) and declined more slowly thereafter to 86% (mean titer 1/1510 +/- 1/210) at year 9 of follow-up. The mean antibody titer was significantly (p < 0.05) higher 4 years after the second MMR vaccination when compared with the corresponding time point after the first vaccination. In 6-year-old seronegative vaccinees the increase and decay of anti-mumps virus antibodies after the first MMR vaccination was similar to that seen in the group of younger vaccinees. A two-dose MMR vaccination protocol resulted in a high mumps immunity level in the vaccinated population.

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