نتایج جستجو برای: rotavirus vaccine

تعداد نتایج: 115323  

2013
Geoffrey A. Weinberg Elizabeth N. Teel Slavica Mijatovic-Rustempasic Daniel C. Payne Sunando Roy Kimberly Foytich Umesh D. Parashar Jon R. Gentsch Michael D. Bowen

Surveillance for rotavirus-associated diarrhea after implementation of rotavirus vaccination can assess vaccine effectiveness and identify disease-associated genotypes. During active vaccine postlicensure surveillance in the United States, we found a novel rotavirus genotype, G14P[24], in a stool sample from a child who had diarrhea. Unusual rotavirus strains may become more prevalent after vac...

2018
Minesh P Shah Rebecca M Dahl Umesh D Parashar Benjamin A Lopman

BACKGROUND Hospitalizations for rotavirus and acute gastroenteritis (AGE) have declined in the US with rotavirus vaccination, though biennial peaks in incidence in children aged less than 5 years occur. This pattern may be explained by lower rotavirus vaccination coverage in US children (59% to 73% from 2010-2015), resulting in accumulation of susceptible children over two successive birth coho...

2017
Jason M. Mwenda Rachel M. Burke Keith Shaba Richard Mihigo Mable Carole Tevi-Benissan Mutale Mumba Joseph Nsiari-Muzeyi Biey Dah Cheikh Alain Poy, MSc Felicitas R. Zawaira Negar Aliabadi Jacqueline E. Tate Terri Hyde Adam L. Cohen Umesh D. Parashar

Rotavirus is a leading cause of severe pediatric diarrhea globally, estimated to have caused 120,000 deaths among children aged <5 years in sub-Saharan Africa in 2013 (1). In 2009, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommended rotavirus vaccination for all infants worldwide (2). Two rotavirus vaccines are currently licensed globally: the monovalent Rotarix vaccine (RV1, GlaxoSmithKline; 2-dos...

Journal: :The Journal of infectious diseases 2002
David I Bernstein David A Sack Keith Reisinger Edward Rothstein Richard L Ward

Rotavirus vaccine development is a high priority. The association between the tetravalent rhesus-human reassortant rotavirus vaccine and intussusception has increased the need to develop new vaccines. In a small efficacy trial, the human rotavirus vaccine 89-12 recently has been shown to be safe and effective; 184 of the 215 healthy infants initially enrolled in this trial were followed for a s...

2013
Catherine A. Panozzo Sylvia Becker-Dreps Virginia Pate Michele Jonsson Funk Til Stürmer David J. Weber M. Alan Brookhart

Rotavirus vaccines are highly effective at preventing gastroenteritis in young children and are now universally recommended for infants in the US. We studied patterns of use of rotavirus vaccines among US infants with commercial insurance. We identified a large cohort of infants in the MarketScan Research Databases, 2006-2010. The analysis was restricted to infants residing in states without st...

Journal: :iranian journal of public health 0
m khodabandehloo m shamsi shahrabadi h keyvani b bambai za sadigh

background: rotaviruses cause diarrhea in infants and young children worldwide. rotavirus outer capsid protein, vp7 is major neutralizing antigen that is important component of subunit vaccine to prevent rotavirus infection. many efforts have been done to produce recombinant vp7 that maintain native characteristics. we used baculovirus expression system to produce rotavirus vp7 protein and to s...

2016
Kazutoyo Asada Hajime Kamiya Shigeru Suga Mizuho Nagao Ryoji Ichimi Takao Fujisawa Masakazu Umemoto Takaaki Tanaka Hiroaki Ito Shigeki Tanaka Masaru Ido Koki Taniguchi Toshiaki Ihara Takashi Nakano

BACKGROUND Rotavirus vaccines were introduced in Japan in November 2011. We evaluated the subsequent reduction of the health-care burden of rotavirus gastroenteritis. METHODS We conducted active surveillance for rotavirus gastroenteritis among children under 5 years old before and after the vaccine introduction. We surveyed hospitalization rates for rotavirus gastroenteritis in children in Ts...

2011
Christa L Fischer Walker Robert E Black

BACKGROUND Diarrhea mortality remains a leading cause of child death and rotavirus vaccine an effective tool for preventing severe rotavirus diarrhea. New data suggest vaccine efficacy may vary by region. METHODS We reviewed published vaccine efficacy trials to estimate a regional-specific effect of vaccine efficacy on severe rotavirus diarrhea and hospitalizations. We assessed the quality of...

Journal: :MMWR. Recommendations and reports : Morbidity and mortality weekly report. Recommendations and reports 2006
Umesh D Parashar James P Alexander Roger I Glass

In February 2006, a live, oral, human-bovine reassortant rotavirus vaccine (RotaTeq) was licensed for use among U.S. infants. The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommends routine vaccination of U.S. infants with 3 doses of this rotavirus vaccine administered orally at ages 2, 4, and 6 months. The first dose should be administered between ages 6-12 weeks. Subsequent doses should b...

2013
Fatima Serhan

In 2001, in anticipation of rotavirus vaccine licensure and introduction, the World Health Organization (WHO) and partners established regional laboratory surveillance networks for rotavirus detection and strain type monitoring among hospitalized children aged <5 years. In 2006, two WHO-prequalified oral rotavirus vaccines were licensed: a 2-dose, single-strain vaccine (Rotarix, GlaxoSmithKline...

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