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Rubella re-infection

Last reviewed dd mmm yyyy. Last edited dd mmm yyyy

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  • this phenomenon can occur in individuals with both vaccine-induced antibody and antibody secondary to a previous natural infection

    • there have been cases of congenital rubella syndrome reported after rubella re-infection - however although the fetal risk of infection cannot be quantified, the risk is considered to be low (1)
  • rubella re-infection in pregnancy
    • risk of asymptomatic reinfection to the fetus in the first 12 weeks of pregnancy is difficult to determine, since few prospective studies have been conducted
      • congenital infection occurs in about 8%, but the risk of defects is probably less than 5%, substantially less than the risk from primary rubella
        • it is therefore important to differentiate reinfection from primary rubella in pregnancy

  • diagnosis of rubella re-infection
    • indicated by a significant rise in rubella IgG antibodies, sometimes to very high levels, in a woman with pre-existing antibodies
    • rubella IgM is also detected in sera taken within 4-6 weeks after rubella contact
    • ideally - pre-existing rubella antibodies should ideally be confirmed by retesting a stored serum sample
      • if a previous serum is not available, two previous laboratory reports of antibodies >=10 IU/ml or a single serum with antibodies >=10 IU/ml obtained after documented rubella vaccination are accepted as evidence of pre-existing immunity
      • without this evidence, supplementary tests may be required to obtain a diagnosis

It is currently not possible to identify those women at risk of reinfection, but it is more common in vaccinees than in those with naturally acquired immunity.

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