O'Shea S, Best J M, Banatvala J E, Shepherd W M
J Infect Dis. 1985 Jan;151(1):89-98. doi: 10.1093/infdis/151.1.89.
Serial samples of serum and nasopharyngeal washings were obtained from 43 volunteers given one of four rubella vaccines (HPV77.DE5, RA27/3, To-336, and Cendehill) and from nine naturally infected volunteers. Rubella-specific serum IgG was detected by radioimmunoassay for up to 12 years in all but one vaccinee, and booster responses occurred in 23.3% of vaccinees. Rubella-specific serum IgA was detected in 37 (90.2%) of 41 vaccinees one year after vaccination but in only five (45.5%) of 11 vaccinees tested 10-12 years after vaccination. Low levels of rubella-specific IgM detected by M-antibody capture radioimmunoassay persisted in seven volunteers--four of them HPV77.DE5 vaccinees--four more than one year after vaccination. Rubella-specific nasopharyngeal IgA was detected for up to five years after natural infection or vaccination with RA27/3 but for no longer than three years among Cendehill, HPV77.DE5, and To-336 vaccinees. Nasopharyngeal IgG antibodies were detected less frequently and at lower levels.