Level of maternal antibody required to protect neonates against early-onset disease caused by group B streptococcus type Ia: A multicenter, seroepidemiology study

Citation
Fyc. Lin et al., Level of maternal antibody required to protect neonates against early-onset disease caused by group B streptococcus type Ia: A multicenter, seroepidemiology study, J INFEC DIS, 184(8), 2001, pp. 1022-1028
Citations number
42
Categorie Soggetti
Clinical Immunolgy & Infectious Disease",Immunology
Journal title
JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES
ISSN journal
00221899 → ACNP
Volume
184
Issue
8
Year of publication
2001
Pages
1022 - 1028
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-1899(20011015)184:8<1022:LOMART>2.0.ZU;2-0
Abstract
Because of the difficulty of conducting efficacy trials of vaccines against group B streptococcus (GBS), the licensure of these vaccines may have to r ely on studies that measure vaccine-induced antibody levels that correlate with protection. This study estimates the level of maternal antibody requir ed to protect neonates against early-onset disease (EOD) caused by GBS type Ia. Levels of maternal serum IgG GBS Ia antibodies, measured by ELISAs in 45 case patients (neonates with EOD caused by GBS Ia) and in 319 control su bjects (neonates colonized by GBS Ia but without EOD) born at greater than or equal to 34 weeks gestation were compared. The probability of developing EOD declined with increasing maternal levels of IgG GBS Ia antibody (P = . 03). Neonates whose mothers had levels of IgG GBS Ia antibody greater than or equal to5 mug/mL had an 88% lower risk (95% confidence interval, 7%-98%) of developing type-specific EOD, compared with those whose mothers had lev els <0.5 <mu>g/mL. A vaccine that induces IgG GBS Ia antibody levels greate r than or equal to5 mug/mL in mothers can be predicted to confer a high deg ree of type-specific immunity to EOD to their infants.