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Abstract
- Each year in France, diarrhoea
caused by rotavirus kills about
10 infants under three years of age
and leads to about 210 hospitalisations
per 100 000 children under
5 years of age.
- Two new oral rotavirus vaccines
designed for immunisation during infancy
are marketed or shortly to be marketed
in France for the first time; one is
based on a human strain and the other
on both bovine and human strains.
- The vaccine based on a human
strain has been tested in a doubleblind
placebo-controlled trial involving
about 63 000 infants. It had no statistically
significant impact on
mortality but prevented about 10 cases
of severe diarrhoea per 1000 vaccinated
infants during the following
year. Other, smaller trials provided
similar results.
- In two double-blind placebo-controlled
trials involving a total of about
70 000 infants, the human-bovine vaccine
prevented about 16 cases of
severe diarrhoea per 1000 vaccinated
infants during the year following vaccination.
As with the human vaccine,
there was no impact on mortality.
- An analysis of data on 60 000 to
70 000 infants immunised with each
vaccine showed no increase in the risk
of acute intestinal intussusception, a
severe adverse effect observed with
another rotavirus vaccine that was
marketed in the 1990s in the United
States (but not in France). This product
has since been withdrawn from
the market.
- The two new rotavirus vaccines do
not appear to have more adverse
effects than placebo.
- Rotavirus vaccination does not
seem to reduce the efficacy of other
vaccines.
- Vaccination is simpler with
Rotarix° than with Rotateq°, requiring
two oral doses instead of three.
However, Rotarix° is sold in kits containing
a vial of powder, a prefilled solvent
syringe, and a syringe-bottle
adaptor, creating a risk that this vaccine
might be accidentally injected
instead of being given orally.