Machado et al1 should be congratulated on seizing the opportunity of the 1997 measles outbreak in São Paulo, Brazil, for learning about measles in marrow transplant recipients. Per the report, only 8 of 156 patients (5.1%) developed measles, and only 1 patient (0.6%) had a severe disease (measles pneumonia). But both the incidence and the severity of measles were likely underestimated. Measles was defined by seroconversion (appearance or 4-fold rise of specific antibodies). A significant fraction of transplant recipients cannot seroconvert (reviewed in Storek and Witherspoon2and in Parkman and Weinberg3). In the São Paulo study, patients with symptoms or signs of measles who did not seroconvert were considered to be patients without measles. The immunity of the patients who could not seroconvert was probably more compromised than the immunity of the patients who could seroconvert. Therefore, the incidence of measles in the patients who could not seroconvert may have been high and the course of the disease in these patients may have been severe. Thus, substantially more than 5.1% transplant recipients may develop measles during an outbreak, and substantially more than 0.6% patients may have a severe course.

1
Machado
 
CM
Goncalves
 
FB
Pannuti
 
CS
Dulley
 
FL
de Souza
 
VA
Measles in bone marrow transplant recipients during an outbreak in São Paulo, Brazil.
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2002
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2
Storek
 
J
Witherspoon
 
RP
Immunologic reconstitution after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.
Clinical Bone Marrow and Blood Stem Cell Transplantation. Cambridge
Atkinson
 
K
2000
111
146
Cambridge University Press
United Kingdom
3
Parkman
 
R
Weinberg
 
KI
Immunological reconstitution following hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.
Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation.
Thomas
 
ED
Blume
 
KG
Forman
 
SJ
1999
704
711
Blackwell Science
Malden, MA
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