AI Article Synopsis

  • A systematic review in Mexico assessed 15 years of rotavirus vaccination, examining various clinical and epidemiological outcomes.
  • Twenty-two articles, primarily observational studies, confirmed the safety, immunogenicity, and efficacy of rotavirus vaccines, especially the human attenuated vaccine (HRV).
  • The review highlights significant benefits in reducing diarrhea-related mortality and morbidity, supporting the ongoing use of rotavirus vaccination in the country.

Article Abstract

A systematic review was conducted in Mexico to consolidate and evaluate evidence after 15 years of rotavirus vaccination, according to the National Immunization Program. Five databases were screened to identify published articles (January 2000-February 2020) with evidence on all clinical and epidemiological endpoints (e.g. immunogenicity, safety, efficacy, impact/effectiveness) of rotavirus vaccination in Mexico. Twenty-two articles were identified (observational studies including health-economic models: 17; randomized controlled trials: 5). Fourteen studies evaluated a human attenuated vaccine (HRV), four studies evaluated both vaccines, and only two evaluated a bovine-human reassortant vaccine, with local efficacy data only for HRV. Local evidence shows vaccines are safe, immunogenic, efficacious, and provide an acceptable risk-benefit profile. The benefits of both vaccines in alleviating the burden of all-cause diarrhea mortality and morbidity are documented in several local post-licensure studies. Findings signify overall benefits of rotavirus vaccination and support the continued use of rotavirus vaccine in Mexico.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8437458PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21645515.2021.1936859DOI Listing

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