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      Rotavirus vaccines: an overview.

      Clinical microbiology reviews
      Administration, Oral, Animals, Cattle, Child, Preschool, Clinical Trials as Topic, Europe, Humans, Infant, Intussusception, chemically induced, Latin America, Rotavirus, classification, genetics, immunology, Rotavirus Infections, prevention & control, Rotavirus Vaccines, administration & dosage, Treatment Outcome, United States, Vaccination, Vaccines, Attenuated

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          Abstract

          Rotavirus infection is the most common cause of severe diarrhea disease in infants and young children worldwide and continues to have a major global impact on childhood morbidity and mortality. Vaccination is the only control measure likely to have a significant impact on the incidence of severe dehydrating rotavirus disease. In 1999, a highly efficacious rotavirus vaccine licensed in the United States, RotaShield, was withdrawn from the market after 14 months because of its association with intussusception. Two new live, oral, attenuated rotavirus vaccines were licensed in 2006: the pentavalent bovine-human reassortant vaccine (RotaTeq) and the monovalent human rotavirus vaccine (Rotarix). Both vaccines have demonstrated very good safety and efficacy profiles in large clinical trials in western industrialized countries and in Latin America. Careful surveillance has not revealed any increased risk of intussusception in the vaccinated groups with either vaccine. The new rotavirus vaccines are now introduced for routine use in a number of industrialized and developing countries. These new safe and effective rotavirus vaccines offer the best hope of reducing the toll of acute rotavirus gastroenteritis in both developed and developing countries.

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