CYBERMED LIFE - ORGANIC  & NATURAL LIVING

Measles

  • Allergic disease and atopic sensitization in children in relation to measles vaccination and measles infection.

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    Abstract Title:

    Allergic disease and atopic sensitization in children in relation to measles vaccination and measles infection.

    Abstract Source:

    Pediatrics. 2009 Mar;123(3):771-8. PMID: 19255001

    Abstract Author(s):

    Helen Rosenlund, Anna Bergström, Johan S Alm, Jackie Swartz, Annika Scheynius, Marianne van Hage, Kari Johansen, Bert Brunekreef, Erika von Mutius, Markus J Ege, Josef Riedler, Charlotte Braun-Fahrländer, Marco Waser, Göran Pershagen,

    Article Affiliation:

    Karolinska Institutet, Institute of Environmental Medicine, Department of Environmental Epidemiology, Box 210, SE-171 77 Stockholm, Sweden. This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

    Abstract:

    OBJECTIVE:Our aim was to investigate the role of measles vaccination and measles infection in the development of allergic disease and atopic sensitization.

    METHODS:A total of 14 893 children were included from the cross-sectional, multicenter Prevention of Allergy-Risk Factors for Sensitization in Children Related to Farming and Anthroposophic Lifestyle study, conducted in 5 European countries (Austria, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, and Switzerland). The children were between 5 and 13 years of age and represented farm children, Steiner-school children, and 2 reference groups. Children attending Steiner schools often have an anthroposophic (holistic) lifestyle in which some immunizations are avoided or postponed. Parental questionnaires provided information on exposure and lifestyle factors as well as symptoms and diagnoses in the children. A sample of the children was invited for additional tests, and 4049 children provided a blood sample for immunoglobulin E analyses. Only children with complete information on measles vaccination and infection were included in the analyses (84%).

    RESULTS:In the whole group of children, atopic sensitization was inversely associated with measles infection, and a similar tendency was seen for measles vaccination. To reduce risks of disease-related modification of exposure, children who reported symptoms of wheezing and/or eczema debuting during first year of life were excluded from some analyses. After this exclusion, inverse associations were observed between measles infection and "any allergic symptom" and "any diagnosis of allergy by a physician." However, no associations were found between measles vaccination and allergic disease.

    CONCLUSION:Our data suggest that measles infection may protect against allergic disease in children.

  • An increasing, potentially measles-susceptible population over time after vaccination in Korea. 📎

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    Abstract Title:

    An increasing, potentially measles-susceptible population over time after vaccination in Korea.

    Abstract Source:

    Vaccine. 2017 07 24 ;35(33):4126-4132. Epub 2017 Jun 29. PMID: 28669617

    Abstract Author(s):

    Hae Ji Kang, Young Woo Han, Su Jin Kim, You-Jin Kim, A-Reum Kim, Joo Ae Kim, Hee-Dong Jung, Hye Eun Eom, Ok Park, Sung Soon Kim

    Article Affiliation:

    Hae Ji Kang

    Abstract:

    BACKGROUND:In Korea, measles occurs mainly in infants<12months of age, who are unvaccinated. In addition, vaccine populations, including adolescents and young adults, can become infected though importation. Thus, the question arises whether the current level of herd immunity in Korea is now insufficient for protecting against measles infection.

    METHODS:Age-specific measles seroprevalence was evaluated by performing enzyme immunoassays and plaque reduction-neutralization tests on 3050 subjects aged 0-50years (birth cohort 1964-2014) and 480 subjects aged 2-30years (birth cohort 1984-2012).

    RESULTS:The overall seropositivity and measles antibody concentrations were 71.5% and 1366mIU/mL, respectively. Progressive decline in antibody levels and seropositivity were observed over time after vaccination in infants, adolescents, and young adults. The accumulation of potentially susceptible individuals in the population was confirmed by comparing data from 2010 and 2014 seroprevalence surveys. The statistical correlation between measles incidence and measles seronegativity was determined.

    CONCLUSIONS:Waning levels of measles antibodies with increasing time post-vaccination suggests that measles susceptibility is potentially increasing in Korea. This trend may be related to limitations of vaccine-induced immunity in the absence of natural boosting by the wild virus, compared to naturally acquired immunity triggered by measles infection. This study provides an important view into the current measles herd immunity in Korea.

  • Case of vaccine-associated measles five weeks post-immunisation, British Columbia, Canada, October 2013. 📎

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    Abstract Title:

    Case of vaccine-associated measles five weeks post-immunisation, British Columbia, Canada, October 2013.

    Abstract Source:

    Euro Surveill. 2013 Dec 5 ;18(49). Epub 2013 Dec 5. PMID: 24330942

    Abstract Author(s):

    M Murti, M Krajden, M Petric, J Hiebert, F Hemming, B Hefford, M Bigham, P Van Buynder

    Article Affiliation:

    M Murti

    Abstract:

    We describe a case of vaccine-associated measles in a two-year-old patient from British Columbia, Canada, in October 2013, who received her first dose of measles-containing vaccine 37 days prior to onset of prodromal symptoms. Identification of this delayed vaccine-associated case occurred in the context of an outbreak investigation of a measles cluster.

  • Impact of Public Health Responses During a Measles Outbreak in an Amish Community in Ohio: Modeling the Dynamics of Transmission. 📎

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    Abstract Title:

    Impact of Public Health Responses During a Measles Outbreak in an Amish Community in Ohio: Modeling the Dynamics of Transmission.

    Abstract Source:

    Am J Epidemiol. 2018 09 1 ;187(9):2002-2010. PMID: 29635277

    Abstract Author(s):

    Paul A Gastañaduy, Sebastian Funk, Prabasaj Paul, Lilith Tatham, Nicholas Fisher, Jeremy Budd, Brian Fowler, Sietske de Fijter, Mary DiOrio, Gregory S Wallace, Bryan Grenfell

    Article Affiliation:

    Paul A Gastañaduy

    Abstract:

    We quantified measles transmissibility during a measles outbreak in Ohio in 2014 to evaluate the impact of public health responses. Case incidence and the serial interval (time between symptom onset in primary cases and secondary cases) were used to assess trends in the effective reproduction number R (the average number of secondary cases generated per case). A mathematical model was parameterized using early R values to determine the size and duration of the outbreak that would have occurred if containment measures had not been initiated, as well as the impact of vaccination. As containment started, we found a 4-fold decline in R (from approximately 4 to 1) over the course of 2 weeks and maintenance of R<1 as control measures continued. Under a conservative scenario, the model estimated 8,472 cases (90% confidence interval (CI): 8,447, 8,489) over 195 days (90% CI: 179, 223) without control efforts and 715 cases (90% CI: 103, 1,338) over 128 days (90% CI: 117, 139) when vaccination was included; 7,757 fewer cases (90% CI: 7,130, 8,365) and 67 fewer outbreak days (90% CI: 48, 98) were attributed to vaccination. Vaccination may not account entirely for transmission reductions, suggesting that changes in community behavior (social distancing) and other control efforts (isolation, quarantining) are important. Our findings highlight the benefits of measles outbreak response and of understanding behavior change dynamics.

  • Laboratory diagnosis of vaccine-associated measles in Zhejiang Province, China. 📎

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    Abstract Title:

    Laboratory diagnosis of vaccine-associated measles in Zhejiang Province, China.

    Abstract Source:

    J Microbiol Immunol Infect. 2017 Oct ;50(5):578-585. Epub 2015 Nov 19. PMID: 26698687

    Abstract Author(s):

    Chang-Ping Xu, Min-Hong Li, Han-Qing He, Yi-Yu Lu, Yan Feng

    Article Affiliation:

    Chang-Ping Xu

    Abstract:

    BACKGROUND/PURPOSE:Along with the improving vaccine coverage, suspected vaccine-associated measles has been reported in Zhejiang Province, China. In order to maintain the accuracy of the measles surveillance system, it is critical to discriminate between measles vaccine and wild-type virus.

    METHODS:Eight suspected cases of vaccine-associated measles were reported in Zhejiang Province during 2011 and 2014. Sera collected within 4 days and throat swabs collected within 6 days after rash onset were tested with immunoglobulin M and measles virus (MeV) RNA to confirm MeV infection. In order to further identify the vaccine-associated cases, throat swabs with positive MeV RNA were tested using an allelic discrimination real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (rRT-PCR) assay developed in this study, RT-PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) recommended by the National Measles Laboratory, and RT-PCR followed by sequencing and genotyping.

    RESULTS:Combining anti-measles immunoglobulin M and RNA testing, eight cases were confirmed as MeV infection. Of the eight, two were identified as vaccine-associated cases by the allelic discrimination rRT-PCR assay, and one was identified by RT-PCR-RFLP. Subsequent sequencing and genotyping confirmed that the sequences of the two cases were identical to that of the Chinese vaccine strain. The developed allelic discrimination rRT-PCR was 10 times more sensitive than the RT-PCR-RFLP assay when RNA standards generated from three genotypes of MeV were tested.

    CONCLUSION:Vaccine-associated measles has been identified in Zhejiang. The developed allelic discrimination rRT-PCR assay is rapid and sensitive, which will facilitate the surveillance for vaccine-associated measles.

  • Largest measles epidemic in North America in a decade--Quebec, Canada, 2011: contribution of susceptibility, serendipity, and superspreading events. 📎

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    Abstract Title:

    Largest measles epidemic in North America in a decade--Quebec, Canada, 2011: contribution of susceptibility, serendipity, and superspreading events.

    Abstract Source:

    J Infect Dis. 2013 Mar 15 ;207(6):990-8. Epub 2012 Dec 21. PMID: 23264672

    Abstract Author(s):

    Gaston De Serres, France Markowski, Eveline Toth, Monique Landry, Danielle Auger, Marlène Mercier, Philippe Bélanger, Bruno Turmel, Horacio Arruda, Nicole Boulianne, Brian J Ward, Danuta M Skowronski

    Article Affiliation:

    Gaston De Serres

    Abstract:

    BACKGROUND:The largest measles epidemic in North America in the last decade, occurred in 2011 in Quebec, Canada, where rates of 1- and 2-dose vaccine coverage among children 3 years of age were 95%-97% and 90%, respectively, with 3%-5% unvaccinated.

    METHODS:Case patients identified through passive surveillance and outbreak investigation were contacted to determine clinical course, vaccination status, and possible source of infection.

    RESULTS:There were 21 measles importations and 725 cases. A superspreading event triggered by 1 importation resulted in sustained transmission and 678 cases. The overall incidence was 9.1 per 100,000; the highest incidence was in adolescents 12-17 years old (75.6 per 100,000), who comprised 56% of case patients. Among adolescents, 22% had received 2 vaccine doses. Outbreak investigation showed this proportion to have been an underestimate; active case finding identified 130% more cases among 2-dose recipients. Two-dose recipients had milder illness and a significantly lower risk of hospitalization than those who were unvaccinated or single-dose recipients.

    CONCLUSIONS:A chance superspreading event revealed an overall level of immunity barely above the elimination threshold when unexpected vulnerability in 2-dose recipients was taken into account. Unvaccinated individuals remain the immunization priority, but a better understanding of susceptibility in 2-dose recipients is needed to define effective interventions if elimination is to be achieved.

  • Measles

  • Measles in a Patient with Presumed Immunity - Los Angeles County, 2015. 📎

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    Abstract Title:

    Measles in a Patient with Presumed Immunity - Los Angeles County, 2015.

    Abstract Source:

    MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 2015 ;64(39):1123. Epub 2015 Oct 9. PMID: 26447803

    Abstract Author(s):

    Amanda Kamali, Chhandasi P Bagchi, Emmanuel Mendoza, Dulmini Wilson, Benjamin Schwartz, Laurene Mascola

    Article Affiliation:

    Amanda Kamali

    Abstract:

    No Abstract Available

  • Outbreak of measles among persons with prior evidence of immunity, New York City, 2011. 📎

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    Abstract Title:

    Outbreak of measles among persons with prior evidence of immunity, New York City, 2011.

    Abstract Source:

    Clin Infect Dis. 2014 May ;58(9):1205-10. Epub 2014 Feb 27. PMID: 24585562

    Abstract Author(s):

    Jennifer B Rosen, Jennifer S Rota, Carole J Hickman, Sun B Sowers, Sara Mercader, Paul A Rota, William J Bellini, Ada J Huang, Margaret K Doll, Jane R Zucker, Christopher M Zimmerman

    Article Affiliation:

    Jennifer B Rosen

    Abstract:

    BACKGROUND:Measles was eliminated in the United States through high vaccination coverage and a public health system able to rapidly respond to measles. Measles may occur among vaccinated individuals, but secondary transmission from such individuals has not been documented.

    METHODS:Suspected patients and contacts exposed during a measles outbreak in New York City in 2011 were investigated. Medical histories and immunization records were obtained. Cases were confirmed by detection of measles-specific immunoglobulin M and/or RNA. Tests for measles immunoglobulin G (IgG), IgG avidity, measurement of measles neutralizing antibody titers, and genotyping were performed to characterize the cases.

    RESULTS:The index patient had 2 doses of measles-containing vaccine; of 88 contacts, 4 secondary patients were confirmed who had either 2 doses of measles-containing vaccine or a past positive measles IgG antibody. All patients had laboratory confirmation of measles infection, clinical symptoms consistent with measles, and high-avidity IgG antibody characteristic of a secondary immune response. Neutralizing antibody titers of secondary patients reached>80 000 mIU/mL 3-4 days after rash onset and that of the index was<500 mIU/mL 9 days after rash onset. No additional cases of measles occurred among 231 contacts of secondary patients.

    CONCLUSIONS:This is the first report of measles transmission from a twice-vaccinated individual with documented secondary vaccine failure. The clinical presentation and laboratory data of the index patient were typical of measles in a naive individual. Secondary patients had robust anamnestic antibody responses. No tertiary cases occurred despite numerous contacts. This outbreak underscores the need for thorough epidemiologic and laboratory investigation of suspected cases of measles regardless of vaccination status.

  • Spotlight on measles 2010: excretion of vaccine strain measles virus in urine and pharyngeal secretions of a child with vaccine associated febrile rash illness, Croatia, March 2010. 📎

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    Abstract Title:

    Spotlight on measles 2010: excretion of vaccine strain measles virus in urine and pharyngeal secretions of a child with vaccine associated febrile rash illness, Croatia, March 2010.

    Abstract Source:

    Euro Surveill. 2010 Sep 2 ;15(35). Epub 2010 Sep 2. PMID: 20822734

    Abstract Author(s):

    B Kaic, I Gjenero-Margan, B Aleraj, T Vilibic-Cavlek, M Santak, A Cvitković, T Nemeth-Blazic, I Ivic Hofman

    Article Affiliation:

    B Kaic

    Abstract:

    We describe excretion of measles vaccine strain Schwarz in a child who developed a febrile rash illness eight days after primary immunisation against measles, mumps and rubella. Throat swabs and urine specimens were collected on the fifth and sixth day of illness, respectively. Genotyping demonstrated measles vaccine strain Schwarz (genotype A). If measles and rubella were not under enhanced surveillance in Croatia, the case would have been either misreported as rubella or not recognised at all.

  • The German measles scare that wasn't

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    The German measles scare that wasn't image

    There were no cases of rubella (German measles) in the UK in 2017—even though doctors had diagnosed at least 532 cases, which had sparked calls for a greater take-up of the MMR vaccine.

    The doctors who diagnosed the cases of rubella had made official notifications—so they were added to health agency totals—and yet oral fluid tests later discovered that each one of the cases had been a misdiagnosis.

  • The National Vaccine Advisory Committee at 30: Impact and opportunity. 📎

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    Abstract Title:

    The National Vaccine Advisory Committee at 30: Impact and opportunity.

    Abstract Source:

    Vaccine. 2018 03 7 ;36(11):1330-1344. PMID: 29422369

    Abstract Author(s):

    Kimberly M Thompson, Bruce G Gellin, Alan R Hinman, Walter A Orenstein

    Article Affiliation:

    Kimberly M Thompson

    Abstract:

    Thirty years after passage of legislation that created the National Vaccine Advisory Committee (NVAC)"to achieve optimal prevention of human infectious diseases through immunization and to achieve optimal prevention against adverse reactions to vaccines,"this review reflects NVAC's role and impact on the U.S. vaccine and immunization enterprise as an external advisor to the Department of Health and Human Services. We reviewed the history of NVAC in the context of the principles of its establishment, with a focus on its reports and recommendations. We performed a systematic literature review to identify NVAC reports published in widely-accessible public health journals, and we reviewed the available archives to identify other reports and resolutions approved by the committee not published in journals. We characterized key issues considered by NVAC according to the five goals of the 2010 National Vaccine Plan. The predominance of NVAC activities to date related to the implementation of immunization across the lifespan and the many aspects of the system needed to foster the goal of full immunization. Reflecting on the impacts of NVAC to date, this review identified 30 NVAC approved reports published in journals, 22 stand-alone resolutions, and 26 unique unpublished reports. The development of new and improved vaccines continues to represent a significant priority for NVAC, and we identified several challenges related to future vaccine innovation. Given the many factors that impact on policy changes in the vaccine and immunization enterprise, we encountered challenges associated with demonstrating attribution of specific policy changes to NVAC recommendations. Although difficult to quantify, this review suggests that NVAC played an important role in the improvements in the U.S. immunization enterprise over the past 30 years and that NVAC can and will continue to play an important role supporting U.S. immunization going forward.

  • Third of measles cases could just be a reaction to the MMR

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    Third of measles cases could just be a reaction to the MMR image

    More than 30 per cent of cases of measles contributing to the 'epidemic' that has sparked the clamp-down on anti-vaxxers are nothing more than reactions to the vaccine.

    Seventy-three of the 194 measles cases recorded in California in 2015—the outbreak that sparked the kick-back against the anti-vax movement—were merely reactions to the MMR (measles-mumps-rubella) vaccine.

    Although the data has never been published, researchers from the US's Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have confirmed that the analysis is correct.

  • Undernutrition as an underlying cause of child deaths associated with diarrhea, pneumonia, malaria, and measles. 📎

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    Abstract Title:

    Undernutrition as an underlying cause of child deaths associated with diarrhea, pneumonia, malaria, and measles.

    Abstract Source:

    Am J Clin Nutr. 2004 Jul ;80(1):193-8. PMID: 15213048

    Abstract Author(s):

    Laura E Caulfield, Mercedes de Onis, Monika Blössner, Robert E Black

    Article Affiliation:

    Laura E Caulfield

    Abstract:

    BACKGROUND:Previous analyses derived the relative risk (RR) of dying as a result of low weight-for-age and calculated the proportion of child deaths worldwide attributable to underweight.

    OBJECTIVES:The objectives were to examine whether the risk of dying because of underweight varies by cause of death and to estimate the fraction of deaths by cause attributable to underweight.

    DESIGN:Data were obtained from investigators of 10 cohort studies with both weight-for-age category (<-3 SDs, -3 to<-2 SDs, -2 to<-1 SD, and>-1 SD) and cause of death information. All 10 studies contributed information on weight-for-age and risk of diarrhea, pneumonia, and all-cause mortality; however, only 6 studies contributed information on deaths because of measles, and only 3 studies contributed information on deaths because of malaria or fever. With use of weighted random effects models, we related the log mortality rate by cause and anthropometric status in each study to derive cause-specific RRs of dying because of undernutrition. Prevalences of each weight-for-age category were obtained from analyses of 310 national nutrition surveys. With use of the RR and prevalence information, we then calculated the fraction of deaths by cause attributable to undernutrition.

    RESULTS:The RR of mortality because of low weight-for-age was elevated for each cause of death and for all-cause mortality. Overall, 52.5% of all deaths in young children were attributable to undernutrition, varying from 44.8% for deaths because of measles to 60.7% for deaths because of diarrhea.

    CONCLUSION:A significant proportion of deaths in young children worldwide is attributable to low weight-for-age, and efforts to reduce malnutrition should be a policy priority.

  • Vaccine-associated"wild-type"measles.

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    Abstract Title:

    Vaccine-associated"wild-type"measles.

    Abstract Source:

    Pediatr Dermatol. 2005 Mar-Apr;22(2):130-2. PMID: 15804301

    Abstract Author(s):

    Kelle Liermann Berggren, Michael Tharp, Kenneth M Boyer

    Article Affiliation:

    Kelle Liermann Berggren

    Abstract:

    Measles is the most contagious of the childhood exanthems and is the leading cause of vaccine-preventable deaths in children, mostly in developing countries. The prodromal stage, consisting of high fever and the triad of cough, coryza, and conjunctivitis, is followed by a caudal progressing rash over a period of 2 to 3 days. With a worldwide vaccination program in place, mortality and morbidity have decreased substantially. Receipt of the live attenuated vaccine generally causes no or only mild side effects such as a low-grade fever and a subtle rash. We report a 1-year-old boy who, 10 days after vaccination, developed vaccine measles which was clinically indistinguishable from the natural disease. Vaccine virus was detected by polymerase chain reaction in the patient's nasopharyngeal secretions.

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