| Literature DB >> 28419095 |
K Zaman1, David A Sack2, Kathleen M Neuzil3, Mohammad Yunus1, Lawrence H Moulton2, Jonathan D Sugimoto4, Jessica A Fleming3, Ilias Hossain1, Shams El Arifeen1, Tasnim Azim1, Mustafizur Rahman1, Kristen D C Lewis3, Andrea J Feller2, Firdausi Qadri1, M Elizabeth Halloran4,5, Alejandro Cravioto1, John C Victor3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rotavirus vaccines are now globally recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO), but in early 2009 WHO's Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on Immunization reviewed available data and concluded that there was no evidence for the efficacy or effectiveness of a two-dose schedule of the human rotavirus vaccine (HRV; Rotarix) given early at 6 and 10 wk of age. Additionally, the effectiveness of programmatic rotavirus vaccination, including possible indirect effects, has not been assessed in low-resource populations in Asia. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28419095 PMCID: PMC5395158 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002282
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Fig 1Distribution of villages randomized to human rotavirus vaccine introduction or no human rotavirus vaccine introduction during the trial, Matlab Health and Demographic Surveillance System.
HRV, human rotavirus vaccine; icddr,b, International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh.
Fig 2Study profile for the primary objective of overall effectiveness.
HRV, human rotavirus vaccine; Matlab HDSS, Matlab Health and Demographic Surveillance System.
Baseline demographic and clinical characteristics of each study group.
| Category | Characteristic | HRV arm | Non-HRV arm |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of villages | 71 | 71 | |
| Total population (all ages) | 116,649 | 105,569 | |
| Average age of population (years) | 27.9 | 28.0 | |
| Mean (s.d.) village population size | 1,643 (1,557) | 1,487 (1,531) | |
| Total population <2 y of age | 5,258 | 4,881 | |
| Number of live births per annum | 2,666 | 2,414 | |
| Mean (s.d.) birth rate per 1,000 | 21.8 (4.8) | 22.6 (7.0) | |
| Mean number of children <2 y of age per village | 74 | 69 | |
| Mean number of baris per village | 38 | 36 | |
| Mean number of children <2 y of age per bari | 2 | 2 | |
| Mean (s.d.) distance of the centroid of each village to Matlab Diarrhoea Hospital (meters) | 7,455 (3,802) | 7,534 (4,140) | |
| Mean annual presentation rate to Matlab Diarrhoea Hospital for diarrhea per 1,000 children <2 y of age (2000–2006) | 63.7 | 66.6 | |
| 6,527 | 5,791 | ||
| 50.4% | 51.1% | ||
| Number (percent) received dose 1 | 6,271 (96.1%) | 5,302 (91.6%) | |
| Mean (s.d.) age at dose 1 (weeks) | 8.6 (2.2) | 8.9 (2.8) | |
| Number (percent) received dose 2 | 6,082 (93.2%) | 5,113 (88.3%) | |
| Mean (s.d.) age at dose 2 (weeks) | 13.3 (2.7) | 13.8 (3.3) | |
| Number (percent) received dose 1 | 4,808 (73.7%) | — | |
| Mean (s.d.) age at dose 1 (weeks) | 8.6 (1.9) | — | |
| Number (percent) received dose 2 | 4,595 (70.4%) | — | |
| Mean (s.d.) age at dose 2 (weeks) | 13.1 (2.2) | — | |
| 5,837 (89.4%) | 5,167 (89.2%) |
aIn 2008 (at the time of randomization); data from 2008 Matlab HDSS.
bNot a randomization unit parameter.
cChildren who were Matlab HDSS residents and were age-eligible for receipt of HRV (i.e., were residents during the period of the trial while they were between 6 and 20 wk of age).
dChildren who were Matlab HDSS residents during the period of the trial on the date they were 6 wk of age.
HRV, human rotavirus vaccine; Matlab HDSS, Matlab Health and Demographic Surveillance System; OPV, oral poliovirus vaccine; s.d., standard deviation; VE, vaccine effectiveness.
Overall effectiveness of the human rotavirus vaccination program in preventing presentations of acute rotavirus diarrhea of any severity and severe acute rotavirus diarrhea among age-eligible children less than 2 y of age, regardless of actual receipt of human rotavirus vaccine.
| ARD analysis | HRV villages | Non-HRV villages | Adjusted VEO | Adjusted rate difference | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cases ( | Person-years | Incidence rate | Cases ( | Person-years | Incidence rate | |||
| Any severity | 164 | 5,857 | 2.80 | 206 | 5,026 | 4.10 | 29.0 (11.3, 43.1) | 1.28 (0.31, 2.25) |
| Severe ARD | 128 | 5,880 | 2.18 | 149 | 5,058 | 2.95 | 22.9 (−0.2, 40.7) | 0.83 (−0.04, 1.71) |
| Any severity | 195 | 6,960 | 2.80 | 235 | 6,031 | 3.90 | 24.9 (7.7, 38.9) | 1.12 (0.24, 2.01) |
| Severe ARD | 151 | 6,992 | 2.16 | 172 | 6,068 | 2.83 | 20.4 (−1.8, 37.7) | 0.74 (−0.07, 1.54) |
aPer 100 person-years.
bEstimated using a Poisson regression model with a Pearson chi-squared scale parameter to account for clustering.
cEstimated per 100 person-years using the approach described in Section 12.3.2 of [21].
dPrimary analysis.
ePerson-time censored at first severe ARD episode, regardless of severity of previous ARD.
ARD, acute rotavirus diarrhea; HRV, human rotavirus vaccine; VEO, overall vaccine effectiveness.
Total effectiveness of human rotavirus vaccine in preventing presentations of acute rotavirus diarrhea of any severity and severe acute rotavirus diarrhea among vaccinees, by age of onset and rotavirus strain detected.
| ARD analysis | HRV villages | Non-HRV villages | Adjusted VET | Adjusted rate difference | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cases ( | Person-years | Incidence rate | Cases ( | Person-years | Incidence rate | |||
| Any severity, all ages | 108 | 4,735 | 2.28 | 194 | 4,998 | 3.88 | 38.7 (20.6, 52.7) | 1.39 (0.47, 2.32) |
| Any severity, all ages | 102 | 4,117 | 2.48 | 172 | 3,893 | 4.42 | 41.4 (23.2, 55.2) | 1.73 (0.64, 2.81) |
| Onset <12 mo | 75 | 2,464 | 3.04 | 135 | 2,340 | 5.77 | 45.2 (26.3, 59.3) | 2.61 (1.10, 4.12) |
| Onset 12–23 mo | 27 | 1,652 | 1.63 | 37 | 1,553 | 2.38 | 28.9 (−15.6, 56.3) | 0.36 (−0.89, 1.62) |
| G1P[8] | 18 | 4,166 | 0.43 | 38 | 3,984 | 0.95 | 54.5 (18.7, 74.6) | — |
| G2P[4] | 10 | 4,166 | 0.24 | 17 | 3,988 | 0.43 | 45.8 (−42.4, 79.4) | — |
| G9P[8] | 15 | 4,166 | 0.36 | 19 | 3,991 | 0.48 | 20.0 (−44.7, 55.8) | — |
| G12P[6] | 10 | 4,167 | 0.24 | 16 | 3,987 | 0.40 | 36.4 (−39.3, 71.1) | — |
| G12P[8] | 24 | 4,164 | 0.58 | 52 | 3,978 | 1.31 | 51.5 (18.5, 71.1) | — |
| Homotypic strain, all ages | 57 | 4,147 | 1.37 | 111 | 3,950 | 2.81 | 48.1 (27.9, 62.7) | — |
| Heterotypic strain, all ages | 20 | 4,159 | 0.48 | 34 | 3,973 | 0.86 | 43.0 (−2.9, 68.4) | — |
| Severe | 75 | 4,135 | 1.81 | 130 | 3,919 | 3.32 | 42.8 (22.1, 57.9) | 1.38 (0.42, 2.35) |
| Onset <12 mo | 53 | 2,472 | 2.14 | 101 | 2,351 | 4.30 | 48.0 (27.0, 63.0) | 2.08 (0.75, 3.41) |
| Onset 12–23 mo | 22 | 1,664 | 1.32 | 29 | 1,568 | 1.85 | 25.8 (−29.5, 57.5) | 0.36 (−0.80, 1.52) |
aPerson-time censored at first ARD episode.
bPer 100 person-years.
cEstimated using a Poisson regression model with a Pearson chi-squared scale parameter to account for clustering.
dEstimated per 100 person-years using the approach described in Section 12.3.2 of [21].
ePerson-time censored at first severe ARD episode, regardless of severity of previous ARD.
fHomotypic includes fully (G1P1A[8]) or partially (G1P# or G#P1A[8]) homotypic strains, while heterotypic includes strains that are neither G1 nor P1A [8]. # indicates any G or P serotype/genotype.
ARD, acute rotavirus diarrhea; ATP, according-to-protocol; HRV, human rotavirus vaccine; mITT, modified intention-to-treat; VET, total vaccine effectiveness.
Serious adverse events identified among human rotavirus vaccine recipients.
| Serious adverse event | Outcome | Relatedness to HRV receipt |
|---|---|---|
| Meningitis with hypoglycemia | Fatal | Not related |
| Accidental drowning | Fatal | Not related |
| Pneumonia with malnutrition | Fatal | Not related |
| Pneumonia with congenital cyanotic heart disease | Fatal | Not related |
| Accidental kerosene oil poisoning | Fatal | Not related |
| Pneumonia | Fatal | Not related |
| Biliary atresia | Fatal | Not related |
| Accidental drowning | Fatal | Not related |
| Accidental drowning | Fatal | Not related |
| Accidental suffocation | Fatal | Not related |
| Febrile convulsions with malnutrition | Fatal | Not related |
| Febrile convulsions with sepsis | Fatal | Not related |
| Suspected ileocolic intussusception | Recovered | Not related |
aA 4-mo-old female was admitted to Matlab Diarrhoea Hospital with bloody stool, frequent vomiting, and a round mass in the hypogastric region suggestive of ileocolic intussusception. The infant was transferred to Dhaka Shishu Hospital, where the child was managed with laparotomy with manual release under general anesthesia. She was discharged 6 d later after full recovery. She had received dose 1 of HRV at 6.3 wk of age and dose 2 at 15.3 wk of age. Onset of this event was 23 d after dose 2 of HRV. The investigator considered the event unrelated to study vaccination but still documented the event carefully and reported it to regulatory authorities and the manufacturer as required by the protocol.
HRV, human rotavirus vaccine.