Taiwanese Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology (Sep 2013)

Seroprevalence of influenza A H1N1 and seroconversion of mothers and infants induced by a single dose of monovalent vaccine

  • Anne Chao,
  • Yhu-Chering Huang,
  • Yao-Lung Chang,
  • Tzu-Hao Wang,
  • Shuenn-Dyh Chang,
  • Ting-Shu Wu,
  • Tsu-Lan Wu,
  • An-Shine Chao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tjog.2013.06.002
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 52, no. 3
pp. 356 – 359

Abstract

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Objective: To determine the prevalence of preexisting antibodies against the pandemic 2009 Influenza A (H1N1) virus in pregnant women and to evaluate the seroprotection of the mothers and infants by a single injection of monovalent vaccine during the pandemic. Materials and Methods: Seropositivity rate of H1N1 among the nonvaccinated were compared with the vaccinated women. A single dose of vaccine, either nonadjuvanted AdimFlu-S or MF59-adjuvanted vaccine, was injected to the voluntarily vaccinated group. Maternal and cord blood sera were collected to evaluate the antibody response of the H1N1 virus. Seropositivity was defined as a hemagglutination inhibition titer to H1N1 (A/Taiwan/126/09) ≥1:40. Results: A total of 210 healthy, singleton, pregnant women were enrolled between January 2010 and May 2010. Seropositivity (≥1:40) of maternal hemagglutination inhibition was significantly higher in the vaccinated group (78%) than the nonvaccinated group (9.5%); 41.6% (20/48) of seropositive titers were >1:80. In nine vaccinated cases resulting in negative serum titers (75% could be achieved in the paired maternal and cord serum samples by a single injection of monovalent H1N1 vaccine.

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