Sero-prevalence of rubella among pregnant women in India, 2017.

Journal: Vaccine
Published:
Abstract

Background: We conducted a sero-survey among pregnant women attending antenatal clinics of six hospitals which also function as sentinel sites for CRS surveillance, to estimate the prevalence of IgG antibodies against rubella.

Methods: We systematically sampled 1800 pregnant women attending antenatal clinics and tested their sera for IgG antibodies against rubella. We classified sera as seropositive (titre ≥10 IU/ml), sero-negative (titre <8 IU/ml) or indeterminate (titre 8-9.9 IU/ml) per manufacturer's instructions. In a sub-sample, we estimated the titers of IgG antibodies against rubella. IgG titer of ≥10 IU/mL was considered protective.

Results: Of 1800 sera tested, 1502 (83.4%) were seropositive and 24 (1.3%) were indeterminate and 274 (15.2%) were sero-negative. Rubella sero-positivity did not differ by age group, educational status or place of residence. Three hundred and eighty three (87.8%) of the 436 sera had IgG concentrations ≥10 IU/mL.

Conclusion: The results of the serosurvey indicate high levels of rubella sero-positivity in pregnant women. High sero-prevalence in the absence of routine childhood immunization indicates continued transmission of rubella virus in cities where sentinel sites are located.

Authors
Divya Muliyil, Pratibha Singh, Srinivas Jois, Suhas Otiv, Vanita Suri, Vishakha Varma, Asha Abraham, Chandrakant Raut, Minakshi Gupta, Mini Singh, Rajalakshmi Viswanathan, Sadanand Naik, Vijaylakshmi Nag, Asha Benakappa, Ashish Bavdekar, Gajanan Sapkal, Kuldeep Singh, Nivedita Gupta, Sanjay Verma, Sridhar Santhanam, Sudhir Mishra, Ambar Bhatnagar, G R Prasad, Jyoti Kolekar, Naga Raj, R Sabarinathan, Ravinder Sachdeva, Suji George, Shyama Chaudhary, Valsan Verghese, Vishal Jagtap, Manasa Bharadwaj, Manoj Murhekar
Relevant Conditions

Rubella, Togaviridae Disease