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Rotavirus vaccine could save millions of lives

Carol Campbell

1 February 2010 | EN

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Rotavirus is the leading cause of severe diarrhoea in children

Flickr/AJC1

[OUDTSHOORN] Rotavirus vaccines prevent diarrhoea and deaths in poor countries, research has confirmed.

Two studies in Africa and Latin America published last week (28 January) in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) verified the effectiveness of rotavirus vaccines, which have so far been trialled only in developed nations and richer developing countries (see Double vaccine victory over rotavirus).

The NEJM studies — in Malawi, Mexico and South Africa — are the first to show that the vaccines work in the world's most impoverished areas too. If included in vaccination programmes worldwide, such vaccines could save millions of children in the developing world, say the authors.

Rotavirus is the leading cause of severe diarrhoea in children in both developed and developing countries. The WHO estimates that more than half a million children die each year from the infection.

In the first study researchers vaccinated almost 5,000 infants in Malawi and South Africa with GlaxoSmithKline's Rotarix vaccine. Overall, it was 60 per cent effective at preventing cases of rotavirus diarrhoea and 30 per cent effective at preventing all kinds of diarrhoea.

The second study was carried out in Mexico, which introduced a rotavirus vaccine — again Rotarix — in 2007. Using public health data provided by the Ministry of Health, the researchers found that deaths from diarrhoea dropped after 2007, reaching a reduction of two-thirds by 2009.

Co-author of the Mexican study, Manish Patel, an epidemiologist from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told SciDev.Net that the most promising aspect of this study was that the vaccine "made a substantial impact on the ground, in the ordinary population".

In June last year the WHO Special Advisory group recommended that rotavirus vaccines be included in all national immunisation programmes.

Jocelyn Moyes, a medical officer in the Epidemiology and Surveillance Unit at South Africa's National Institute for Communicable Diseases, said that South Africa introduced the Rotarix vaccine in August 2009 but the country remains the only African nation to do so.

Developing countries rolling out the vaccine will face many challenges, said Moyes, including procuring additional infrastructure, such as refrigerators; sorting out supply chain logistics and training nurses.

Patel said rotavirus vaccination programmes have been established in Latin American countries since 2006 and the WHO and the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunisation (GAVI) are extending this to other countries.

The world's poorest countries, across Asia and Africa would, in all probability, begin the process of preparing for vaccine roll out in the next few months, he said.

References

New England Journal of Medicine 362, 289 (2010)

New England Journal of Medicine 362, 299 (2010)

Comments

Festus Ihwagi ( Kenya )

8 February 2010

The vaccine is surely effective. I come from a developing country and lucky to be among the middle income earners who could afford the vaccine for my son (costs approx $40 both jabs). My son never got diarrhea despite my neighbors kids suffering at one point or another, and with every risk of cross-transmission. While I know its relatively expensive, i believe many more parents can afford it, but they lack knowledge of the virus. In rural areas, such diarrhea is associated with 'teething' problems but i can tell with a fair degree of certainity most of the incidences are rotavirus related.

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