BMC Microbiology (Jun 2022)

Does the rubella immunoglobulin G affect the severity of COVID- 19? 

  • Leyla Sahebi,
  • Mohsen Hosseini,
  • Alireza Abdollahi,
  • Nahid Farrokhzad,
  • Samrand Fattah Ghazi,
  • Farzaneh Samaei Noroozi,
  • Fereshteh Ghiasvand

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12866-022-02563-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Objective & aim The coronavirus disease, so far (COVID-19) has brought about millions of infections and fatalities throughout the world. Our aim was to determine the correlation between rubella IGG titers with the severity COVID-19. Materials & methods This study was conducted among COVID-19 confirmed patients over 18 years of age. The disease severity levels were categorized by WHO interim guidance. The rubella-specific IgG antibody-titer spectrum was measured (within first 48 h of hospitalization) by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Result In a study of 46 inpatients with varying COVID-19 disease severity (mild, moderate, severe, and critical), we observed a negative correlation between rubella IgG antibody titers and COVID‐19 severity (P-Value = 0.017), There was an interaction between COVID-19 vaccination history and rubella IGG on severity COVID-19 (P-Value = 0.0015). There was an interaction between age group under 44 years (including national measles- rubella (MR) vaccination in Iran) and rubella IGG titers on severity COVID-19 too (p-value = 0.014). Conclusion In conclusion, MR vaccination seems to have a positive effect in reducing the severity of the disease, emphasizing that, the important and separate effect of the IGG rubella (due to natural or extrinsic immunity) titers is determining.

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