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Safety and Efficacy of an Attenuated Vaccine against Severe Rotavirus Gastroenteritis

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2006

Year

TLDR

A randomized, double‑blind, phase‑3 trial enrolled 63,225 infants from 11 Latin American countries and Finland, who received two oral doses of an attenuated G1P[8] rotavirus vaccine or placebo at ~2 and 4 months, with severe gastroenteritis identified by active surveillance and graded using the 20‑point Vesikari scale. The vaccine achieved 85 % efficacy against severe rotavirus gastroenteritis and 100 % against the most severe cases, reduced overall diarrheal hospitalizations by 42 %, and showed no increased risk of intussusception. ClinicalTrials.gov identifiers: NCT00139347 and NCT00263666.

Abstract

The safety and efficacy of an attenuated G1P[8] human rotavirus (HRV) vaccine were tested in a randomized, double-blind, phase 3 trial.We studied 63,225 healthy infants from 11 Latin American countries and Finland who received two oral doses of either the HRV vaccine (31,673 infants) or placebo (31,552 infants) at approximately two months and four months of age. Severe gastroenteritis episodes were identified by active surveillance. The severity of disease was graded with the use of the 20-point Vesikari scale. Vaccine efficacy was evaluated in a subgroup of 20,169 infants (10,159 vaccinees and 10,010 placebo recipients).The efficacy of the vaccine against severe rotavirus gastroenteritis and against rotavirus-associated hospitalization was 85 percent (P<0.001 for the comparison with placebo) and reached 100 percent against more severe rotavirus gastroenteritis. Hospitalization for diarrhea of any cause was reduced by 42 percent (95 percent confidence interval, 29 to 53 percent; P<0.001). During the 31-day window after each dose, six vaccine recipients and seven placebo recipients had definite intussusception (difference in risk, -0.32 per 10,000 infants; 95 percent confidence interval, -2.91 to 2.18; P=0.78).Two oral doses of the live attenuated G1P[8] HRV vaccine were highly efficacious in protecting infants against severe rotavirus gastroenteritis, significantly reduced the rate of severe gastroenteritis from any cause, and were not associated with an increased risk of intussusception. (ClinicalTrials.gov numbers, NCT00139347 and NCT00263666.)

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