Rotavirus Vaccine Program

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The Rotavirus Vaccine Program is a mission to reduce child morbidity and mortality from diarrhoeal disease by accelerating the availability of rotavirus vaccines appropriate for use in developing countries.

Each year more than 600,000 children die from diarrhoeal disease caused by rotavirus, and another two million are hospitalised. Most deaths occur in developing countries where access to treatment is limited; however, nearly every child in the world will suffer an episode of diarrhea caused by rotavirus before age five.

In 2003 the World Health Organization and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control established the Rotavirus Vaccine Program to reduce child morbidity and mortality from diarrhoeal disease by making a vaccine against rotavirus available for use in developing countries.[1]

History

In 1998 a rotavirus vaccine was licensed for use in the United States. Clinical trials in the United States, Finland, and Venezuela had found it to be 80 to 100% effective at preventing severe diarrhoea caused by rotavirus A, and researchers had detected no statistically significant serious adverse effects. The manufacturer of the vaccine, however, withdrew it from the market in 1999, after it was discovered that the vaccine may have contributed to an increased risk for intussusception, or bowel obstruction, in one of every 12,000 vaccinated infants. The experience provoked intense debate about the relative risks and benefits of a rotavirus vaccine.[2] In 2006, two vaccines against Rotavirus A infection were shown to be safe and effective in children.

Rotarix

Rotarix by GlaxoSmithKline[3] and RotaTeq by Merck.[4] Both are taken orally and contain disabled live virus.

Child receiving a live vaccine

Rotarix is a human, live attenuated rotavirus vaccine containing a rotavirus strain of G1P[8] specificity.[3] The licensure of Rotarix is in process in the European Union.[5]

Rotateq

RotaTeq is a live, oral pentavalent vaccine that contains five rotaviruses produced by reassortment. The rotavirus A parent strains of the reassortants were isolated from human and bovine hosts. Four reassortant rotaviruses express one of the outer capsid, VP7, proteins (serotypes G1, G2, G3, or G4) from the human rotavirus parent strain and the attachment protein VP4 (type P7) from the bovine rotavirus parent strain. The fifth reassortant virus expresses the attachment protein VP4, (type P1A), from the human rotavirus parent strain and the outer capsid protein VP7 (serotype G6) from the bovine rotavirus parent strain.In February 2006, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved RotaTeq for use in the United States. Merck is working with a range of partners including the Rotavirus Vaccine Program, PATH, (Program for Appropriate Technology in Health) and other governmental and non-governmental organisations to develop and implement mechanisms for providing access to this vaccine in the developing world.[6]

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References

  1. Glass RI, Parashar UD, Bresee JS; et al. (2006). "Rotavirus vaccines: current prospects and future challenges". Lancet. 368 (9532): 323–32. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(06)68815-6. PMID 16860702.
  2. Bines J (2006). "Intussusception and rotavirus vaccines". Vaccine. 24 (18): 3772–6. doi:10.1016/j.vaccine.2005.07.031. PMID 16099078.
  3. 3.0 3.1 O'Ryan M (2007). "Rotarix (RIX4414): an oral human rotavirus vaccine". Expert review of vaccines. 6 (1): 11–9. doi:10.1586/14760584.6.1.11. PMID 17280473.
  4. Matson DO (2006). "The pentavalent rotavirus vaccine, RotaTeq". Seminars in paediatric infectious diseases. 17 (4): 195–9. doi:10.1053/j.spid.2006.08.005. PMID 17055370.
  5. Vesikari T, Giaquinto C, Huppertz HI (2006). "Clinical trials of rotavirus vaccines in Europe". Pediatr. Infect. Dis. J. 25 (1 Suppl): S42–7. PMID 16397428.
  6. McCarthy M (2003). "Project seeks to "fast track" rotavirus vaccine". Lancet. 361 (9357): 582. PMID 12598149.


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