Rf. Helfand et al., The effect of timing of sample collection on the detection of measles-specific IgM in serum and oral fluid samples after primary measles vaccination, EPIDEM INFE, 123(3), 1999, pp. 451-455
This study compares the timing of the rise and decline of measles-specific
IgM in serum samples and in oral fluid samples. Two hundred and eighty 9-mo
nth-old infants presenting for routine measles vaccination in Addis Ababa,
Ethiopia, were enrolled. Paired serum and oral fluid samples were collected
before and 1, 2, 3 or 4 weeks after measles vaccination. Samples were test
ed by using a modified antibody-capture enzyme immunoassay. For the 321 IgM
-negative pre- and post-vaccination serum samples, 317 (99 %) of their corr
esponding oral fluid samples were IgM-negative. Among the 130 IgM-positive
serum samples, 75 % of their paired oral fluid samples were IgM-positive, w
ith the percentage rising to 87% after oral fluid samples collected greater
than or equal to 3.5 weeks after vaccination were excluded. Among the post
-vaccination serum samples, the percent IgM-positive peaked in week 3 and d
eclined to 79 % in week 4. For postvaccination oral fluid samples, the perc
ent IgM-positive peaked in weeks 2 and 3, and then declined to 43 % in week
4. This modified antibody-capture enzyme immunoassay appears to detect vac
cine-induced measles-specific IgM in the first 3 weeks after vaccination.