Management of Suspected Measles
Immediately isolate the patient in an airborne-infection isolation room (negative pressure) and implement strict airborne precautions with N95 respirators for all staff, regardless of immunity status, as the patient is contagious from 4 days before through 4 days after rash onset. 1, 2
Immediate Infection Control Measures
- Place the patient in a medical mask immediately upon arrival and transfer to an airborne-infection isolation room (negative air-pressure room) as soon as possible 1
- If no isolation room is available, use a private room with the door closed and maintain mask use 1
- All healthcare personnel entering the room must use N95 respirators or equivalent respiratory protection, even if they have documented immunity, due to the ~1% possibility of vaccine failure 1, 3
- Only staff with presumptive evidence of immunity (2 documented MMR doses, laboratory evidence of immunity, laboratory-confirmed disease, or birth before 1957) should provide care when possible 1
- Maintain isolation for at least 4 days after rash onset 1, 2, 4
Treatment Protocol
Vitamin A Supplementation (Critical for Reducing Mortality)
All patients with clinical measles should receive vitamin A supplementation immediately:
- Adults and children ≥12 months: 200,000 IU orally on day 1 4
- Children <12 months: 100,000 IU orally on day 1 4
- Administer a second dose of the same amount on day 2 for complicated cases (pneumonia, otitis media, croup, diarrhea with dehydration, or neurological complications) 4
- For patients with eye symptoms of vitamin A deficiency: give 200,000 IU on day 1, day 2, and again 1-4 weeks later 4
This is the only evidence-based intervention proven to reduce measles morbidity and mortality 4
Supportive Care
- Monitor and treat complications with standard therapies: oral rehydration for diarrhea, antibiotics for bacterial superinfections (pneumonia, otitis media) 4
- Monitor nutritional status and provide feeding support as indicated 4
- No specific antiviral therapy is routinely recommended for immunocompetent patients 5
Post-Exposure Prophylaxis for Contacts
Immediately evaluate all contacts for evidence of measles immunity (2 documented MMR doses, laboratory evidence, confirmed disease, or birth before 1957) 1
For Susceptible Contacts (No Evidence of Immunity):
- MMR vaccine within 72 hours of exposure can prevent or modify disease 1, 3, 4
- Immune globulin (IG) 0.25 mL/kg intramuscularly (maximum 15 mL) within 6 days of exposure for those who cannot receive MMR 1, 4
- Pregnant women: IG 0.25 mL/kg (maximum 15 mL) within 6 days 4
- Immunocompromised patients: IG 0.5 mL/kg (maximum 15 mL) regardless of vaccination status 4
Healthcare Personnel Exposure Management:
- HCP without evidence of immunity: offer MMR vaccine immediately and exclude from work days 5-21 after exposure 1
- HCP who refuse vaccination after exposure: exclude from all patient contact days 5-21 after exposure, even if they received IG 1
- HCP with 1 documented dose: give second dose and may remain at work 1
- If IG is administered, extend observation period to 28 days (IG prolongs incubation period) 1, 2, 4
Diagnostic Confirmation
- Collect serum for measles IgM antibody testing (most common confirmatory test) 1, 5
- Collect urine or nasopharyngeal specimens for viral isolation and genetic characterization as close to rash onset as possible 1
- Contact local or state health department immediately when measles is suspected—this is an urgent public health situation requiring prompt investigation 1
Outbreak Control Measures
- One confirmed case constitutes an urgent public health situation requiring immediate control activities 1
- Do not delay control activities pending laboratory confirmation 1
- Vaccinate or exclude all persons without acceptable evidence of immunity from the outbreak setting (school, daycare, hospital) 1
- Persons exempt from vaccination for medical or religious reasons must be excluded until 21 days after rash onset in the last case 1, 2
- Mass community revaccination is generally not necessary 1
Critical Pitfalls to Avoid
- Do not use regular surgical masks—N95 respirators are required for airborne precautions 2, 4
- Do not forget that patients are contagious 4 days before rash appears, making early transmission likely before diagnosis 2, 4
- Do not omit vitamin A supplementation—this is the only intervention proven to reduce mortality 4
- Do not allow HCP without proper immunity to care for patients, even with PPE 2, 4
- Do not terminate isolation before 4 full days after rash onset 2, 4
- Do not assume that vaccinated HCP are completely protected—maintain airborne precautions for all staff 1, 3