Effectiveness of Monovalent and Pentavalent Rotavirus Vaccines in Guatemala

Paul A. Gastañaduy, Ingrid Contreras-Roldán, Chris Bernart, Beatriz López, Stephen R. Benoit, Marvin Xuya, Fredy Muñoz, Rishi Desai, Osbourne Quaye, Ka Ian Tam, Diana K. Evans-Bowen, Umesh D. Parashar, Manish Patel, John P. McCracken

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

25 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background. Concerns remain about lower effectiveness and waning immunity of rotavirus vaccines in resource-poor populations. We assessed vaccine effectiveness against rotavirus in Guatemala, where both the monovalent (RV1; 2-dose series) and pentavalent (RV5; 3-dose series) vaccines were introduced in 2010. Methods. A case-control evaluation was conducted in 4 hospitals from January 2012 to August 2013. Vaccine status was compared between case patients (children with laboratory-confirmed rotavirus diarrhea) and 2 sets of controls: nondiarrhea "hospital" controls (matched by birth date and site) and nonrotavirus "test-negative" diarrhea controls (adjusted for age, birth month/year, and site). Vaccine effectiveness ([1 - odds ratio of vaccination] × 100%) was computed using logistic regression models. Results. We evaluated 213 case patients, 657 hospital controls, and 334 test-negative controls. Effectiveness of 2-3 doses of a rotavirus vaccine against rotavirus requiring emergency department visit or hospitalization was 74% (95% confidence interval [CI], 58%-84%) with hospital controls, and 52% (95% CI, 26%-69%) with test-negative controls. Using hospital controls, no significant difference in effectiveness was observed between infants 6-11 months (74% [95% CI, 18%-92%]) and children ≥12 months of age (71% [95% CI, 44%-85%]) (P =. 85), nor between complete courses of RV1 (63% [95% CI, 23%-82%]) and RV5 (69% [95% CI, 29%-87%]) (P =. 96). An uncommon G12P[8] strain, partially heterotypic to strains in both vaccines, was identified in 89% of cases. Conclusions. RV1 and RV5 were similarly effective against severe rotavirus diarrhea caused by a heterotypic strain in Guatemala. This supports broader implementation of rotavirus vaccination in low-income countries where >90% global deaths from rotavirus occur.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)S121-S126
JournalClinical Infectious Diseases
Volume62
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 May 2016

Keywords

  • Guatemala
  • gastroenteritis
  • rotavirus
  • vaccine effectiveness

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