1. Persistence of hepatitis A vaccine induced seropositivity in infants and young children by maternal antibody status: 10-year follow-up
- Author
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Lisa R. Bulkow, Philip R. Spradling, Chriss Homan, Dale J. Hu, Brian J. McMahon, Saleem Kamili, Umid M. Sharapov, Michael G. Bruce, Susan Negus, and Jan Drobeniuc
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Time Factors ,viruses ,Hepatitis A vaccine ,Dose-Response Relationship, Immunologic ,Hepatitis A Antibodies ,Persistence (computer science) ,Cohort Studies ,Pregnancy ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Pregnancy Complications, Infectious ,Maternal-Fetal Exchange ,Hepatitis A Vaccines ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,10 year follow up ,Incidence ,virus diseases ,Infant ,Hepatitis A ,digestive system diseases ,Confidence interval ,Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical ,Maternal antibody ,Child, Preschool ,Indians, North American ,Female ,business ,Alaska ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Persistence of seropositivity conferred by hepatitis A vaccine administered to children2 years of age is unknown and passively transferred maternal antibodies to hepatitis A virus (maternal anti-HAV) may lower the infant's immune response to the vaccine. One hundred ninety-seven infants and young children were randomized into three groups to receive a two-dose hepatitis A vaccine: group 1 at 6 and 12 months, group 2 at 12 and 18 months, and group 3 at 15 and 21 months of age. Within each group, infants were randomized by maternal anti-HAV status. Anti-HAV levels were measured at 1 and 6 months and at 3, 5, 7, and 10 years after the second dose of hepatitis A vaccination. Children in all groups had evidence of seroprotection (10 mIU/mL) at 1 month after the second dose. At 10 years, all children retained seroprotective anti-HAV levels except for only 7% and 11% of children in group 1 born to anti-HAV-negative and anti-HAV-positive mothers, respectively, and 4% of group 3 children born to anti-HAV-negative mothers. At 10 years, children born to anti-HAV-negative mothers in group 3 had the highest geometric mean concentration (GMC) (97 mIU/mL; 95% confidence interval, 71-133 mIU/mL) and children born to anti-HAV-positive mothers in group 1 had the lowest GMC (29 mIU/mL; 95% confidence interval, 20-40 mIU/mL). Anti-HAV levels through 10 years of age correlated with initial peak anti-HAV levels (tested at 1 month after the second dose).The seropositivity induced by hepatitis A vaccine given to children2 years of age persists for at least 10 years regardless of presence of maternal anti-HAV.
- Published
- 2011