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Persistence of Antibody in Human Subjects for 7 to 10 Years following Administration of Combined Live Attenuated Measles, Mumps, and Rubella Virus Vaccines
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1980
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ImmunologyImmunotherapyRubella Virus VaccinesCombined Virus VaccinesVaccine TargetVaccine SurveillanceClinical EpidemiologyAbstractantibody PersistenceHuman SubjectsInfection ControlVaccinologyVaccine SafetyVaccine DevelopmentOpen Community 10.5Vaccine TestingHumoral ImmunityVaccinationVaccine EfficacyVaccine DesignMedicineVaccine Research
AbstractAntibody persistence was measured in children in the open community 10.5 years after combined measles-mumps-rubella (14 children), 9 years after measles-rubella (17 children), 10.5 years after mumps-rubella (9 children), and 7 years after measles-mumps (20 children) vaccines were given. There were increases, declines, and stationary titers among the children in the serum samples taken 6 weeks after vaccination compared with those taken at later time periods. This reflected a decline in antibody in some children and subclinical natural reinfection in others. Importantly, all the children still retained detectable antibody, indicating long-term persistence of immunity by vaccination with combined virus vaccines.