Seventy five Gambian women were immunised with a single dose of a group A+group C meningococcal polysaccharide vaccine during the last trimester of pregnancy. IgG antibody titres were measured in mothers and in their infants by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). All women had a good response to vaccination and maternal antibodies were high at the time of delivery (23.2 μg/ml for group A antibodies and 14.3 μg/ml for group C antibodies). However, only a proportion of this antibody crossed the placenta; cord blood:maternal antibody ratios were 30% for group A antibody and 44% for group C antibody, respectively. Considerable variability in cord blood:maternal blood ratios was seen between individuals. This could not be related to age, parity, or ethnic group. Mean group A and group C cord blood:maternal blood ratios were lower in women with serological evidence of syphilis than in seronegative women, and diminished transfer of group A antibody was noted in women with active malarial infection of the placenta. Antibody titres declined rapidly in infants and by the age of 3-4 months these had reached control values. Maternal immunisation may give infants some protection against group A and group C meningococcal disease but only during the first few months of life.
CITATION STYLE
O’Dempsey, T. J. D., McArdle, T., Ceesay, S. J., Secka, O., Demba, E., Banya, W. A. S., … Greenwood, B. M. (1996). Meningococcal antibody titres in infants of women immunised with meningococcal polysaccharide vaccine during pregnancy. Archives of Disease in Childhood, 74(1). https://doi.org/10.1136/fn.74.1.f43
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