AI Article Synopsis

  • The study assessed the impact of the Rotarix® rotavirus vaccine in Mozambique, focusing on its effect on hospitalizations due to childhood gastroenteritis after its introduction in September 2015.
  • Findings showed a significant decrease in the prevalence of acute gastroenteritis from 19% pre-vaccine to 10% post-vaccine, preventing 40% of expected cases overall and 84% of lab-confirmed rotavirus cases in infants.
  • The incidence of rotavirus was also drastically lower post-vaccination, with an 11.8-fold decrease, most notably in infants, highlighting the vaccine's important role in protecting vulnerable populations from severe diarrhea and related hospitalizations.

Article Abstract

Background: Rotavirus vaccine(Rotarix®) was introduced in Mozambique through its Expanded Program of Immunization in September 2015. We assessed the impact of rotavirus vaccination on childhood gastroenteritis-associated hospitalizations post-vaccine introduction in a high HIV prevalence rural setting of southern Mozambique.

Methods: We reviewed and compared the trend of hospitalizations (prevalence) and incidence rates of acute gastroenteritis (AGE), and rotavirus associated-diarrhea (laboratory confirmed rotavirus) in pre- (January 2008-August 2015) and post-rotavirus vaccine introduction periods (September 2015-December 2020), among children <5 years of age admitted to Manhiça District Hospital.

Results: From January 2008 to December 2020, rotavirus vaccination was found to contribute to the decline of the prevalence of AGE from 19% (95% CI: 18.14-20.44) prior to the vaccine introduction to 10% (95% CI: 8.89-11.48) in the post-introduction period, preventing 40% (95 % IE: 38-42) and 84% (95 % IE: 80-87) of the expected AGE and laboratory confirmed rotavirus cases, respectively, among infants. Similarly, the overall incidence of rotavirus was 11.8-fold lower in the post-vaccine introduction period (0.4/1000 child-years-at-risk [CYAR]; 95% CI: 0.3-0.6) compared with the pre-vaccination period (4.7/1000 CYAR; 95% CI: 4.2-5.1) with the highest reduction being observed among infants (16.8-fold lower from the 15.1/1000 CYAR in the pre-vaccine to 0.9/1000 CYAR in the post-vaccine eras).

Conclusions: We documented a significant reduction in all-cause diarrhea hospitalizations and rotavirus positivity after vaccine introduction demonstrating the beneficial impact of rotavirus vaccination in a highly vulnerable population.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9589241PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2022.09.050DOI Listing

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