Back to Search Start Over

Evaluating the effect of measles and rubella mass vaccination campaigns on seroprevalence in India: a before-and-after cross-sectional household serosurvey in four districts, 2018–2020

Authors :
Manoj V Murhekar
Nivedita Gupta
Alvira Z Hasan
Muthusamy Santhosh Kumar
V Saravana Kumar
Christine Prosperi
Gajanan N Sapkal
Jeromie Wesley Vivian Thangaraj
Ojas Kaduskar
Vaishali Bhatt
Gururaj Rao Deshpande
Ullas Padinjaremattathil Thankappan
Avi Kumar Bansal
Sanjay L Chauhan
Gangandeep Singh Grover
Arun Kumar Jain
Ragini N Kulkarni
Santanu Kumar Sharma
Itta K Chaaithanya
Sanchit Kharwal
Sunil K Mishra
Neha R Salvi
Sandeep Sharma
Nilanju P Sarmah
R Sabarinathan
Augustine Duraiswamy
D Sudha Rani
K Kanagasabai
Abhishek Lachyan
Poonam Gawali
Mitali Kapoor
Arpit Kumar Shrivastava
Saurabh Kumar Chonker
Bipin Tilekar
Babasaheb V Tandale
Mohammad Ahmad
Lucky Sangal
Amy Winter
Sanjay M Mehendale
William J Moss
Kyla Hayford
Source :
The Lancet Global Health. 10:e1655-e1664
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

India did phased measles-rubella supplementary immunisation activities (MR-SIAs; ie, mass-immunisation campaigns) targeting children aged 9 months to less than 15 years. We estimated measles-rubella seroprevalence before and after the MR-SIAs to quantify the effect on population immunity and identify remaining immunity gaps.Between March 9, 2018 and March 19, 2020 we did community-based, cross-sectional serosurveys in four districts in India before and after MR-SIAs. 30 villages or wards were selected within each district, and one census enumeration block from each was selected as the survey cluster. Households were enumerated and 13 children in the younger age group (9 months to5 years) and 13 children in the older ager group (5 to15 years) were randomly selected by use of computer-generated random numbers. Serum samples were tested for IgG antibodies to measles and rubella viruses by enzyme immunoassay.Specimens were collected from 2570 children before the MR-SIA and from 2619 children afterwards. The weighted MR-SIA coverage ranged from 73·7% to 90·5% in younger children and from 73·6% to 93·6% in older children. Before the MR-SIA, district-level measles seroprevalence was between 80·7% and 88·5% among younger children in all districts, and between 63·4% and 84·5% among older children. After the MR-SIA, measles seroprevalence among younger children increased to more than 90% (range 91·5 to 96·0) in all districts except Kanpur Nagar, in which it remained unchanged 80·4%. Among older children, measles seroprevalence increased to more than 90·0% (range 93·7% to 96·5%) in all districts except Hoshiarpur (88·7%). A significant increase in rubella seroprevalence was observed in all districts in both age groups, with the largest effect in Dibrugarh, where rubella seroprevalence increased from 10·6% to 96·5% among younger children.Measles-rubella seroprevalence increased substantially after the MR-SIAs but the serosurvey also identified remaining gaps in population immunity.The BillMelinda Gates Foundation and Indian Council of Medical Research.

Details

ISSN :
2214109X
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lancet Global Health
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1bd5263b1e8f21b082dfaf173efb3f43