1. Maternal varicella antibodies in children aged less than one year: Assessment of antibody decay.
- Author
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Shelly Bolotin, Stephanie L Hughes, Rachel D Savage, Elizabeth McLachlan, Alberto Severini, Callum Arnold, Susan Richardson, Natasha S Crowcroft, Shelley Deek, Scott A Halperin, Kevin A Brown, Todd Hatchette, Selma Osman, Jonathan B Gubbay, and Michelle Science
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
ObjectivesTo investigate maternal antibody levels to varicella in infants Study designIn this study, we included specimens from infants ResultsWe found that 32% of 196 included specimens represented infants susceptible to varicella at one month of age, increasing to nearly 80% at three months of age. At six months of age, all infants were susceptible to varicella and the predicted mean varicella antibody concentration declined to 62 mIU/mL (95% confidence interval 40, 84), well below the threshold of protection.ConclusionsWe found that varicella maternal antibody levels wane rapidly in infants, leaving most infants susceptible by four months of age. Our findings have implications for the timing of first dose of varicella-containing vaccine, infection control measures, and infant post-exposure prophylaxis recommendations.
- Published
- 2023
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