1. Increased measles and rubella seroprevalence in children using residual blood samples from health facilities and household serosurveys after supplementary immunization activities in two districts in India.
- Author
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Prosperi C, Hasan AZ, Winter AK, Chaaithanya IK, Salvi NR, Sharma S, Bansal AK, Chauhan SL, Kulkarni RN, Lachyan A, Gawali P, Kapoor M, Shrivastava AK, Chonker SK, Bhatt V, Kaduskar O, Deshpande GR, Esteban I, Sabarinathan R, Saravana Kumar V, Truelove SA, Kumar MS, Thangaraj JWV, Sangal L, Mehendale SM, Sapkal GN, Gupta N, Hayford K, Moss WJ, and Murhekar MV
- Subjects
- Humans, India epidemiology, Seroepidemiologic Studies, Child, Child, Preschool, Infant, Adolescent, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Male, Health Facilities statistics & numerical data, Family Characteristics, Rubella Vaccine immunology, Rubella Vaccine administration & dosage, Rubella virus immunology, Measles virus immunology, Rubella epidemiology, Rubella prevention & control, Rubella immunology, Measles epidemiology, Measles prevention & control, Measles immunology, Antibodies, Viral blood
- Abstract
Residual blood specimens provide a sample repository that could be analyzed to estimate and track changes in seroprevalence with fewer resources than household-based surveys. We conducted parallel facility and community-based cross-sectional serological surveys in two districts in India, Kanpur Nagar District, Uttar Pradesh, and Palghar District, Maharashtra, before and after a measles-rubella supplemental immunization activity (MR-SIA) from 2018 to 2019. Anonymized residual specimens from children 9 months to younger than 15 years of age were collected from public and private diagnostic laboratories and public hospitals and tested for IgG antibodies to measles and rubella viruses. Significant increases in seroprevalence were observed following the MR SIA using the facility-based specimens. Younger children whose specimens were tested at a public facility in Kanpur Nagar District had significantly lower rubella seroprevalence prior to the SIA compared to those attending a private hospital, but this difference was not observed following the SIA. Similar increases in rubella seroprevalence were observed in facility-based and community-based serosurveys following the MR SIA, but trends in measles seroprevalence were inconsistent between the two specimen sources. Despite challenges with representativeness and limited metadata, residual specimens can be useful in estimating seroprevalence and assessing trends through facility-based sentinel surveillance.
- Published
- 2024
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