Abstract
Little is known about long-lasting measles protective immunity when exposure to wild-type or vaccine measles virus precedes HIV infection. The results obtained suggest that measles immunity wanes and the lowest measles geometric mean titres (GMT) were significantly associated with measles vaccine-induced immunity in individuals that later developed HIV infection (86% prevalence, GMT 164 mIU/ml) compared to naturally induced immunity in HIV-infected adults (100% prevalence, GMT 340 mIU/ml, P = 0·0082) or non-HIV infected adults (100%, GMT 724 mIU/ml, P = 0·0001), and vaccine-induced immunity in non-HIV-infected adults (100%, GMT 347 mIU/ml, P = 0·017). The study was conducted in an area without wild-type virus circulation since 2000. The absence of virus circulating may alter the paradigm of lifelong immunity to measles virus after vaccination. As the proportion of HIV-infected individuals possessing only vaccine-induced immunity continues to grow, checking the status of measles immunity in this group is strongly recommended. © 2014 Cambridge University Press.
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Isa, M. B., Pavan, J. V., Sicilia Don, P., Grutadauria, S., Martinez, L. C., Giordano, M. O., … Nates, S. V. (2014). Persistence of measles neutralizing antibody related to vaccine and natural infection acquired before HIV infection. Epidemiology and Infection, 142(8), 1708–1712. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0950268813002628
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