Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics (Dec 2019)

Assessment of population immunity to measles in Ontario, Canada: a Canadian Immunization Research Network (CIRN) study

  • Shelly Bolotin,
  • Alberto Severini,
  • Todd Hatchette,
  • Elizabeth McLachlan,
  • Rachel Savage,
  • Stephanie L. Hughes,
  • John Wang,
  • Shelley L. Deeks,
  • Sarah Wilson,
  • Marc Brisson,
  • Scott A. Halperin,
  • Jonathan Gubbay,
  • Tony Mazzulli,
  • Bouchra Serhir,
  • Brian J. Ward,
  • Natasha Crowcroft

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/21645515.2019.1619402
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 12
pp. 2856 – 2864

Abstract

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Canada eliminated measles in 1998. We conducted a sero-epidemiology study to estimate population immunity to measles in the province of Ontario, Canada and to identify groups at higher risk of outbreaks. We used a previously developed modified enzyme immunoassay to test 1,199 residual sera from patients aged 1–39 years. We re-tested negative and equivocal sera using a plaque reduction neutralization assay. We interpreted our results in the context of Ontario’s immunization program and vaccine coverage data. Of 1,199 sera, 1035 (86.3%, 95% confidence interval (CI) 84.4, 88.2) were above the measles threshold for protection, 70 (5.8%, 95% CI 4.5, 7.2) were equivocal and 94 (7.8%, 95% CI 6.3, 9.4) were negative. The proportion of positive sera was highest for those 1–5 years, with 180/199 (90.5%, 95% CI 86.4, 94.5) positive sera, and lowest for those age 12–19 years, at 158/199 (79.4%, 95% CI 73.8, 85.0). Adjusted for age, females were more likely than males to have antibody titers above the threshold of protection (odds ratio = 1.60, 95% CI 1.14, 2.24). Most of the study cohort were eligible for two measles vaccine doses, and vaccine uptake in Ontario is >90% for school-aged cohorts. We observed a higher than expected proportion of sera with antibody levels below the threshold of protection, suggesting that immunity in some Ontario age-groups may be waning, despite high vaccine coverage. Alternatively, the traditional measles correlates of protection may not be an appropriate measure of population protection in measles-eliminated settings.

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