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Cord Blood Antibodies Following Bbibp-Corv (Sinopharm) Vaccination During Pregnancy Publisher Pubmed



Hantoushzadeh S1 ; Eshraghi N1 ; Younesi S2 ; Salehi M3 ; Rezaei N4 ; Hasheminejad MM1 ; Rashidian P1 ; Shirdel S1 ; Asadi F1 ; Ghaemi M1
Authors

Source: Immunity# Inflammation and Disease Published:2023


Abstract

Objective: This study aimed to evaluate the maternal and umbilical cord blood antibody levels, after COVID vaccination during pregnancy. Method: The women who received the COVID-19 vaccine (Sinopharm) during pregnancy were included. Maternal and cord blood samples were tested to detect the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 receptor binding domain (RBD) specific antibodies. In addition, obstetric information and side effects after vaccination were gathered. Result: A total of 23 women were included. Eleven pregnant women took two doses and 12 cases received a single dose of the vaccine. No IgM antibody was detected in any maternal blood or cord blood samples. The RBD-specific Immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibody was positive in mothers receiving 2 doses of the vaccine and their infants. But the antibody titers were under the positive cut-off threshold for the other 12 women who were vaccinated with a single dose. Women who received both doses of vaccine had significantly higher IgG levels than a single dose of Sinopharm (p =.025). The same result was demonstrated in infants born to these mothers (p =.019). Conclusion: There was a significant correlation between maternal and neonatal IgG concentrations. Although, receiving both doses of the BBIBP-CorV vaccine (not 1 dose) during pregnancy is highly beneficial for increasing humoral immunity for the mother and fetus. © 2023 The Authors. Immunity, Inflammation and Disease published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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