A Nationwide Seroprevalence Study for Measles in Individuals of Fertile Age in Romania
Aurora Stanescu, Simona Maria Ruta, Mihaela Leustean, Ionel Iosif, Camelia Sultana, Anca Maria Panaitescu, Florentina Ligia Furtunescu, Costin Cernescu, Adriana Pistol

TL;DR
A study in Romania found that only 77% of people of fertile age have measles immunity, highlighting gaps that may lead to outbreaks and increased risk for newborns.
Contribution
This nationwide study identifies immunity gaps in Romania's fertile-age population, linking low seroprevalence to measles outbreaks and newborn vulnerability.
Findings
77% seroprevalence of measles antibodies in fertile-age individuals, with no gender or regional differences.
Older individuals showed higher seropositivity and antibody titers, suggesting persistent immunity from natural infection or vaccination.
Pregnant women had lower seroprevalence (68.4%), with older women showing higher immunity and antibody reactivity.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Romania remains endemic for measles due to suboptimal vaccine coverage rates. During the last three epidemics, the highest incidence of measles was recorded in children younger than 1 year, who should have been partially protected by maternal antibodies. A nationwide cross-sectional seroprevalence study was conducted on persons of fertile age, to evaluate potential immunity gaps in the population. Methods: Between June and October 2020, 959 serum samples were collected from individuals aged 25–44 years (46.5% females) from all the geographic regions in Romania. Measles IgG antibodies were assessed using an enzyme-linked immune assay (DIA.PRO-Diagnostic Bioprobes Srl, Italy). Statistical analysis was performed in IBM SPSS Statistics 27.0, using Fisher’s exact and chi-squared tests to test for associations between seropositivity and demographic factors, with p <…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVirology and Viral Diseases · Vaccine Coverage and Hesitancy · SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 Research
