High ratio of measles-specific IgG/IgM associated with nodular pneumonia in vaccinated individuals

Background: Vaccinated individuals infected with measles can develop nodular pneumonia. These cases can be misdiagnosed due to the absence of specific IgM and typical symptoms. An effective diagnostic tool is needed. Methods: During March 2016, adult inpatients in Yucheng People’s Hospital were enro...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Donghao Yu, Guangmei Zhang, Lingyu Gao, Wenbo Xu, Bin Cao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2018-11-01
Series:International Journal of Infectious Diseases
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S120197121834503X
Description
Summary:Background: Vaccinated individuals infected with measles can develop nodular pneumonia. These cases can be misdiagnosed due to the absence of specific IgM and typical symptoms. An effective diagnostic tool is needed. Methods: During March 2016, adult inpatients in Yucheng People’s Hospital were enrolled prospectively and included in the study. Patients were included if samples were obtained ≤14 days from the onset of fever. Measles virus was detected by RT-PCR of the oropharyngeal swab sample. Chest computed tomography scans and medical records were obtained. Oropharyngeal swabs and blood samples were collected for IgM and IgG testing, RT-PCR, and gene sequencing. Results: Sixteen patients were enrolled. Ten were found to have nodular pneumonia and were defined as the nodular group. The remaining six patients were defined as the control group. Measles-specific IgG titers in the nodular group were high (3618.3–5000 mIU/ml), while IgM titers were low (<25 mIU/ml); IgG titers in the control group were low (241.4–2560.3 mIU/ml), while IgM titers were high (137–5000 mIU/ml). No obvious viral mutation was detected in the nodular group. Conclusions: Measles-associated nodular pneumonia was only evident in those patients with an IgG/IgM ratio >20. In measles outbreaks, the IgG/IgM ratio may be useful to identify nodular pneumonia. Keywords: Nodular pneumonia, Measles, Radiology and other imaging, Viral infection, Immunity
ISSN:1201-9712