1. Correlating IgG levels with neutralising antibody levels to indicate clinical protection in healthcare workers at risk during a measles outbreak
- Author
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Siyuan Hu, Nicola Logan, Sarah Coleman, Cariad Evans, Brian J. Willett, and Margaret J. Hosie
- Subjects
Infectious Diseases ,Virology ,Health Personnel ,Immunoglobulin G ,Measles Vaccine ,Vaccination ,Humans ,measles outbreak ,healthcare workers ,neutralising antibody ,clinical protection ,IgG testing ,Antibodies, Viral ,Luciferases ,Antibodies, Neutralizing ,Disease Outbreaks ,Measles - Abstract
The rapid transmission of measles poses a great challenge for measles elimination. Thus, rapid testing is required to screen the health status in the population during measles outbreaks. A pseudotype-based virus neutralisation assay was used to measure neutralising antibody titres in serum samples collected from healthcare workers in Sheffield during the measles outbreak in 2016. Vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) pseudotypes bearing the haemagglutinin and fusion glycoproteins of measles virus (MeV) and carrying a luciferase marker gene were prepared; the neutralising antibody titre was defined as the dilution resulting in 90% reduction in luciferase activity. Spearman’s correlation coefficients between IgG titres and neutralising antibody levels ranged from 0.40 to 0.55 (p < 0.05) or from 0.71 to 0.79 (p < 0.0001) when the IgG titres were obtained using different testing kits. In addition, the currently used vaccine was observed to cross-neutralise most circulating MeV genotypes. However, the percentage of individuals being “well-protected” was lower than 95%, the target rate of vaccination coverage to eliminate measles. These results demonstrate that the level of clinical protection against measles in individuals could be inferred by IgG titre, as long as a precise correlation has been established between IgG testing and neutralisation assay; moreover, maintaining a high vaccination coverage rate is still necessary for measles elimination.
- Published
- 2022