Pediatric Medicine

Most Missed Question in Peds Prep – Measles Post‑Exposure Prophylaxis

Board-style review of measles post-exposure prophylaxis: when to give MMR within 72 hours vs immune globulin for high-risk patients.

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Key takeaway: After measles exposure, give MMR within 72 hours to eligible patients—even if they’ve already had 1 dose—while reserving immune globulin for high-risk groups. 

Question –  Measles exposure 

You are evaluating a 3-year-old child after a measles outbreak was reported in the local school district. The child had been in contact with a child diagnosed with measles less than 24 hours prior to today's visit. The child had 1 dose of MMR vaccine at 13 months of age.

What would you recommend for this child?  

Answer Options:

  1. 1 dose of measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine
  2. Intravenous immune globulin at a dose of 0.5 mL/kg
  3. close observation with measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine dose given if any viral prodrome is appreciated
  4. no intervention indicated
 

In board-style outbreak/exposure scenarios, test-takers often overthink whether a previously vaccinated child “needs anything.” The exam-reliable rule is that measles PEP is time-dependent: MMR can prevent or modify disease if given within 72 hours of exposure (CDC/ACIP; AAP Red Book). This child is eligible (age >12 months, not immunocompromised, exposed <24 hours ago), and they are also not fully immunized (needs 2 doses), so administering MMR now is both PEP and an accelerated second dose in the context of outbreak risk.

Immune globulin is a common trap: it is not first-line for healthy, immunocompetent children >12 months. Per CDC/ACIP and AAP, immune globulin PEP is reserved for higher-risk groups (e.g., infants <12 months, pregnant patients without evidence of immunity, and severely immunocompromised patients), and must be given within an appropriate timeframe (generally within 6 days of exposure).

 

Why This Pediatric Medicine Question Is Often Missed

  • Clinicians confuse routine schedule (MMR at 12–15 months and 4–6 years) with outbreak/exposure dosing, where the second dose can be given earlier as long as minimum intervals are met.
  • Overuse of immune globulin: boards emphasize who qualifies (high risk) and who doesn’t (healthy children >12 months).
  • “Observe and wait for symptoms” is wrong because PEP efficacy depends on timing, not clinical prodrome.

 

What the Distractors Indicate

Option What It Tests / Implies Why It’s Wrong Here
 1 dose of measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine  Knowledge that MMR within 72 hours can serve as measles PEP; accelerated completion of 2-dose series Correct for an immunocompetent 3-year-old exposed <24 hours ago (CDC/ACIP; AAP Red Book).
 Intravenous immune globulin at a dose of 0.5 mL/kg  Confusion that any exposure warrants immune globulin IVIG is for high-risk exposed patients (e.g., severe immunocompromise) rather than a healthy 3-year-old. Dose/route also varies by product/indication.
 close observation with measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine dose given if any viral prodrome is appreciated  Misbelief that vaccination should wait for symptoms PEP is most effective when given promptly; waiting for prodrome misses the 72-hour window for vaccine-based PEP.
 no intervention indicated  Assumes 1 prior dose is “fully protected,” so nothing needed Full evidence of immunity generally requires 2 documented MMR doses (and outbreaks warrant aggressive prophylaxis).

 

High-Yield Pearl for Exam Prep

Measles exposure: MMR ≤72 hours for eligible patients; immune globulin (≤6 days) only for infants <12 months, pregnant non-immune, or severely immunocompromised. 

 

Core Learning Objectives

  1. Apply CDC/ACIP measles post-exposure prophylaxis timing and eligibility criteria (MMR vs immune globulin).
  2. Distinguish routine MMR scheduling from outbreak/exposure accelerated dosing principles.


The Exam “Test Trick” at Play

The question “feels” like a routine immunization schedule item (second dose at 4–6 years), but it is actually a PEP timing question: exposure <24 hours means you should act now, and in an eligible child the action is MMR, not observation and not immune globulin. 

 

Additional Practice Questions and Remediation for Measles PEP 

 

Pediatric Medicine Practice Question 1 -  Infant exposure 

A 8-month-old infant is exposed to a confirmed measles case at daycare yesterday. What is the best prophylaxis?

  • A. Intramuscular immune globulin (IGIM) within 6 days
  • B. MMR vaccine today
  • C. No intervention because infant is too young
  • D. Oral acyclovir
  • E. Observe for fever and rash only

Answer and Remediation

A — Correct response!: Infants <12 months are high-risk; give immune globulin promptly (AAP Red Book; CDC/ACIP).

B — Review: MMR can be given at 6–11 months for travel/outbreak control, but for PEP in infants the preferred/standard approach is immune globulin.

C — Review: Too young for routine series does not mean “no prophylaxis.”

D — Review: Acyclovir is for VZV, not measles.

E — Review: Delays miss effective prophylaxis windows. 

Pediatric Medicine Practice Question 2 -  Immunocompromised exposure 

A 6-year-old with acute lymphoblastic leukemia on chemotherapy is exposed to measles 2 days ago. Best management?

  • A. MMR vaccine
  • B. Intravenous immune globulin (IVIG) within 6 days
  • C. No intervention if afebrile
  • D. Azithromycin prophylaxis
  • E. Repeat MMR titers only

Answer and Remediation

A — Review: Live vaccine is contraindicated in severe immunosuppression.

B — Correct response!: Severely immunocompromised patients should receive IVIG for measles PEP (CDC/ACIP; AAP).

C — Review: High risk for severe disease—PEP indicated.

D — Review: Antibiotics do not prevent measles.

E — Review: Do not delay PEP while awaiting labs. 

Pediatric Medicine Practice Question 3 -  Partially immunized toddler 

A 2-year-old received 1 MMR dose at 12 months and is exposed to measles today. What should you do?

  • A. No intervention—already vaccinated
  • B. Immune globulin
  • C. Give MMR now (within 72 hours)
  • D. Delay vaccination until day 7 post-exposure
  • E. Give varicella vaccine only

Answer and Remediation

A — Review: One dose is not full evidence of immunity in outbreak/exposure framing.

B — Review: IG is for high-risk groups, not healthy toddlers.

C — Correct response!: MMR within 72 hours is appropriate PEP and advances the second dose (CDC/ACIP; AAP).

D — Review: Too late for vaccine-based PEP.

E — Review: Varicella vaccine doesn’t address measles exposure. 

Pediatric Medicine Practice Question 4 -  Timing window trap 

A healthy 4-year-old (no MMR doses) is exposed to measles 5 days ago. Best prophylaxis today?

  • A. MMR vaccine as PEP
  • B. Immune globulin within 6 days
  • C. No intervention—too late to do anything
  • D. Start oseltamivir
  • E. Give MMR and immune globulin together routinely
Answer and Remediation

A — Review: MMR PEP window is ≤72 hours; at day 5 it’s too late to rely on vaccine as PEP.

B — Correct response!: IG can be used up to ~6 days post-exposure for susceptible patients (CDC/ACIP; AAP).

C — Review: IG may still be effective and indicated at day 5.

D — Review: Influenza antiviral—irrelevant.

E — Review: Not routinely; co-administration has specific indications and spacing considerations, and is not the default. 

 

Mini Case Discussion Prompt

How would your recommendation change (MMR vs immune globulin vs no action) if the exposed patient were: (1) 10 months old, (2) pregnant and nonimmune, (3) a healthcare worker with 2 documented MMR doses, or (4) on high-dose steroids?

 

Mini FAQ

Q1: Why give a second MMR dose early during an outbreak/exposure?
A: The ABP/boards expect you to recognize that the second dose can be given earlier than age 4–6 years when indicated; exposure/outbreak risk shifts you from “routine schedule” to “risk-based dosing” (CDC/ACIP).

Q2: What’s the key timing difference between MMR and immune globulin for measles PEP?
A: MMR works as PEP if given within 72 hours; immune globulin can be given later (generally within 6 days) and is used for high-risk or vaccine-ineligible patients (CDC/ACIP; AAP Red Book).

Q3: Who should get immune globulin instead of MMR?
A: High-risk exposed patients—classically infants <12 months, pregnant nonimmune, and severely immunocompromised—because they either can’t receive live vaccine or are at high risk of severe measles.

Q4: If someone already has 2 documented MMR doses, do they need PEP after exposure?
A: Typically no; 2 documented doses is accepted as evidence of immunity for board purposes (CDC/ACIP), barring special institutional policies or unusual immunodeficiency contexts.


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